Zelda Flabby Manicure wrote: » People are obsessed with “privacy”. They aren’t the big bad wolf sitting there listening like you think, it’s jonsense. It’s also not about being lazy. They are a fantastic aid to life in many many ways. I’d really would be lost without echos now I’m so used to them. I’ll soon be building a new house and home automation is going to be planned in from the start, everything is going to be smart from the lights, to front door to garage doors to heating etc etc. Probably have an amazon echo in every room. I couldn’t disagree more, coincidently I just posted in the the “obsolete” thread how I’m very glad to see the back of manual handbrakes, auto handbrakes and hill hold really improve driving pleasure and comfort!
Comhra wrote: » Voice activated anything. I can't bring myself to speak to inanimate objects.
Zelda Flabby Manicure wrote: » People are obsessed with “privacy”. They aren’t the big bad wolf sitting there listening like you think!
leex wrote: » Electric hand brakes in cars.
storker wrote: » A solution in search of a problem if I ever saw one.
colm_mcm wrote: » Virgin/Vodafone/Sky boxes. Peak user friendliness, intuitive memorable button sequences was the original Sky+ box. Gone downhill for usability since then despite improvements in other areas.
Zelda Flabby Manicure wrote: » Wired headphones are a thing of the past for me for quite a while already and will soon be for everyone. Bluetooth all the way, couldn’t be dealing with wires.
Atoms for Peace wrote: » It's an obsolete technology that had its hayday during Edwardian times. Hydrogen cell technology is the future.
L1011 wrote: » Hydrogen cell needs reliable and efficient electric drivetrains. They aren't going to appear from nowhere, current EV developments are driving them
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » Hydrogen is only a way of storing energy. You have to make it first. You can make it from water. But half the energy goes into the oxygen so it's way more energy efficient to make it from natural gas. So in reality it's a fossil fuel. Efficient electric motors have been around for ages. In April 29, 1899 an electric car became the first road vehicle to go past 100Km/hr. It got to 105.88Km/hr using heavy lead batteries. Electric motors have respectable efficiencies and power to weight ratios. Battery weight and cost are the main limitations. De Rivaz had a hydrogen powered vehicle back in 1808. Hydrogen is the technology of the future. Just like it always has been, and always will. SpaceX have shown that the weight efficiency of hydrogen powered upper rocket stages can be replaced by using larger but cheaper hydrocarbon ones.
Voice activated anything. I can't bring myself to speak to inanimate objects.
mrcheez wrote: » So you don't use a phone then?
The Tetrarch wrote: » Radios/speakers on motorcycles.
mrcheez wrote: » ... or control your lights ... or control your TV ... or control your central heating ... or read out latest weather forecast ... or read out news headlines ... or add reminders ****ing best invention in past 10 years imo
Capt'n Midnight wrote: » For music Bluetooth headphones are the best thing ever
Kyson Rough Train wrote: » even then its a bum deal. it cost you your privacy.
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » Not for music quality.
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » With the constant packet compress & de-compress nature of bt, you are sacrificing any quality for convenience. Some with an untrained ear mightn't notice any real difference, but a copper point-to-point line auxiliary connection will be better the majority of the time. Pro musicians will 99% of the time avoid bluetooth, and opt for a hard line connection on stage/recording over anything wireless (even then it will be 2.4GHz broad and uncompressed, with db boost, with a NGate chain). Many also prefer (very) old soviet 12ax7 (ECC83) pre's, along with power 12BH7 vacum amp type tubes for a 'nicer quality warm sound' into a dual DSP engine, dished out to an array of quadraphonic celestion GT12 or greenback fullstacks. Perhaps the best headphones to use (for quality music) might be the ageless and legendary Beyerdynamic DT 100s (no bluetooth).
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » Not for music quality. With the constant packet compress & de-compress nature of bt, you are sacrificing any quality for convenience.
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » Perhaps the best headphones to use (for quality music) might be the ageless and legendary Beyerdynamic DT 100s (no bluetooth).
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » Not for music quality. With the constant packet compress & de-compress nature of bt, you are sacrificing any quality for convenience. Some with an untrained ear mightn't notice any real difference, but a copper point-to-point line auxiliary connection will be better the majority of the time. Pro musicians will 99% of the time avoid bluetooth, and opt for a hard line connection on stage/recording over anything wireless (even then it will be 2.4GHz broad and uncompressed, with db boost, with a NGate chain). Many also prefer (very) old soviet 12ax7 (ECC83) pre's, along with power 12BH7 vacum amp type tubes for a 'nicer quality warm sound' into a dual DSP engine, dished out to an array of quadraphonic celestion GT12 or greenback fullstacks. Perhaps the best headphones to use (for quality music) might be the ageless and legendary Beyerdynamic DT 100s (no bluetooth).
Luciana Obnoxious Composer wrote: » Not for music quality. With the constant packet compress & de-compress nature of bt, you are sacrificing any quality for convenience. Some with an untrained ear mightn't notice any real difference, but a copper point