The LCD Panel vs. The Crossbow 324
Ev!LOnE was one of several readers to point out an interesting LCD stress test: "ASUS recently came out with Asus LS201 — a TFT monitor with a protective panel made of crystal-sapphire. What I didn't imagine was the amount of punishment that thing can take. Apparently some Ukrainians shared the same concern and went for a test." Translation not necessary, but some clues about the narration would be appreciated in comments.
DANGER! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:DANGER! (Score:5, Funny)
Steve Ballmer clicks "Buy"
Re:DANGER! (Score:5, Funny)
Wii Have A Solution (Score:5, Funny)
Forget fists...
Finally we have a display that's safe for Wii-users!
some of the youtube comments are funny.. (Score:2, Funny)
Blendtec (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Blendtec (Score:4, Funny)
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That just means the blender isn't big enough.
Mwahahahahaha
hmmmm.... (Score:5, Insightful)
like that monitor though. wonder if it would survive a sledge hammer to the screen. i've seen monitors taking a few punches from angry windows users.
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Re:hmmmm.... (Score:5, Funny)
You must have pretty tough working conditions. We've never felt the need to put "ability to withstand 90lb long bow attack" on any of our purchasing forms.
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in my office in the past year...
* 2 sets of bows + arrows. we used to go to an archery club 2 miles away from our work place one a week before the other nerd's missus had a kid. currently trying to find a club a bit closer to my home. great fun, very relaxing. and the people you meet are fascinating.
* 1 shotgun. boss holds a licence
* 1
* 1 air pistol. boss is an idiot who doesn't know when to stop.
* 1 crossbow. my brother was showing the
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If you were, then you would have requirements for MIL-SPEC hardware.
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well if he can cock the crossbow with just his hand then it's not a very powerful crossbow. try a 90lb long bow and get back to me.
Try a compound crossbow and arrows that don't have wooden shafts and soft iron heads, and call me when the arrow doesn't pierce the monitor, punch through the wall behind it, and impale itself in a marketing intern.
It is pretty impressive that he can pound on it with a hammer, even lightly- that's far better than anything else...buuuuuut there were a lot of things going for
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i don't think that much more power is needed to dam
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There was a fascinating NPR special about the longbow versus plate armor claims. English longbows, according to modern tests of the soft iron used for their heads and tested against plate iron similar to that of plate armor, simply bent the tip and was deflected. What the arrows *did* do was go easily through chain, leather, un
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i prefer traditional bows myself. simpler purer somehow. compunds are definitely more difficult to maintain (when a string snapped on a compound near me i thought it was louder than a gun shot) but the guy who trained me was in the irish army and when i asked he said that different special forces around the world still occasionly use bows for their ability to silently deliver either an ar
Paging Mr SuperBanana (Score:3, Funny)
Well I did it, but I missed the marketing intern - I think the monitor knocked the arrow off course. Any pointers?
This monitor is for pussies! (Score:5, Funny)
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or maybe he just has really strong hands?
the world will never know...
if only... (Score:5, Funny)
I am in AWE (Score:5, Interesting)
I do wonder how they do against a bullet (slow bullet like an ordinary 38), maybe you need to double them
Re:I am in AWE (Score:5, Interesting)
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Assuming you were standing in precisely the right spot to see in line with the camera's vision, yes, it would be convincing. Otherwise it would look like a guy with a TV on his chest, and draw even more attention than no display at all.
Unless the system can project a different image in every direction, t
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How hard would it be to flash patterns that flickered at a rate known to give seizures, and just give the police forces polarized glasses to field them out.
Even coordinating a moving pattern among multiple units could be very distracting and make it hard to attack an individual. Three lines of police officers covered in LCDs that just display the classic "static" would be very effective camouflage from attackers on the ground.
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There are way to many interesting applications for something like this...
smarter monitor (Score:5, Funny)
Re:smarter monitor (Score:5, Funny)
Hard core! (Score:5, Funny)
Good but.. (Score:4, Funny)
Cleavage (Score:2)
I agree with other comments that it seemed like a pretty lame cross bow, and I wonder of which material the tip is made. It looked soft. It is still a good lesson on the strength of single crystals.
Re:Cleavage (Score:5, Funny)
I don't get it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Interesting)
People blow $599.00 on a "premium" LCD monitor and then bitch about paying $199.00 for a decent arm that will outlast 12 monitors and give you real freedom. Hell get decent LCD arm and the speakers are even off the desk mounted off the arms as well.
Re:I don't get it (Score:4, Insightful)
I think you're kidding yourself if you think that most people do this, even most purchasers of a "high end" monitor. It is a distinctly minority item, even among high-end purchases. Personally, I do use a monitor arm in my office, but I'm one of the very few. And there are plenty of situations where a monitor arm isn't feasible or practical.
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cNet UK review. We scratched it. (Score:5, Informative)
One such product is the Asus LS201 -- a TFT monitor with a protective panel made of crystal-sapphire. Our Asus rep says not only is it scratch-proof, but it's also 'punch-proof'. We were dared to hit it as hard as we could and told it wouldn't break.
Never ones to shirk from a challenge, we formed an orderly queue and gleefully punched the hell out of our first LS201 sample. Unfortunately one of our punchers was wearing a ring, and the offending jewellery left a 2cm scratch on the supposedly scratch-proof monitor.
Asus sent us a replacement and politely asked us to remove any jewellery before we let rip. We duly obliged, but instead of emerging unscathed, the LS201 developed a small, unidentifiable blemish below the protective panel. It wasn't a scratch or a dent -- it looked more like a small piece of fluff.
Our verdict: the LS201 will not shatter into a million pieces when punched (don't try this at home). It's therefore ideal if you're the type of person who likes to attack inanimate objects, or just drop blameless pieces of technology. But it's most definitely not scratch-proof -- we don't care what the stickers say.
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Re:cNet UK review. We scratched it. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:cNet UK review. We scratched it. (Score:4, Interesting)
Not too surprising (Score:5, Interesting)
It's nice they have gotten the process cheap enough for LCD screens. Definitely won't scratch when you clean it with ordinary cleaners.
This looks like a job for... (Score:2)
Heck, if they can test ammo penetration on books, frozen clothing and bread, why not this monitor?
I'd trust a Ukrainian product review show ... (Score:2, Flamebait)
Why doesn't the iPhone have this? (Score:5, Interesting)
That kind of toughness makes real sense in expensive mobile devices. I was surprised that the iPhone didn't come with a sapphire or diamond screen.
This isn't exotic technology today. The typical supermarket checkout scanner uses sapphire [seamarkinternational.com] or diamond [diamonex.com] coating on the glass. That's why it can survive years of canned goods (and, for Home Depot, hand tools) being scraped across the scanner. In the checkout scanner world, plain glass lasts 2-4 weeks. For diamond, the makers claim 9 years. The sapphire vendor offers a lifetime warranty.
Because it's a touch-screen (Score:2)
Because Apple wants you to pay 4 replacement [n/t] (Score:2)
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Oh no... (Score:2)
It's fun shooting the monitors while the sarge is talking...
Translation (Score:5, Informative)
Listen up, Lenovo! (Score:5, Insightful)
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A far more rigorous test (Score:5, Funny)
Translations. (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Translations. (Score:5, Funny)
I need to get this for an old customer. (Score:2)
built a gaming PC for a guy who had serious anger management issues. Caught him punching his CRT once. Lucky he hasn't busted it yet.
Side note - That was a REALLY cheesy arrangement of Mason William's "Classical Gas" in the background. Sounds much better with classical guitar leading it.
Re:I need to get this for an old customer. (Score:4, Interesting)
The Obvious Question (Score:4, Funny)
Transparent aluminum (Score:3, Funny)
Just as good for transporting whales I assure you.
I want one. (Score:2)
crossbow+1 (Score:4, Funny)
something easier... (Score:3, Funny)
Transparent Aluminium (Score:3, Funny)
Re:lets see.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:lets see.... (Score:4, Interesting)
And, oh yes, if there's a fund setup to catch and kill these bastards, I fully support it.
Or just DDOS ripway.com (or is it h1.ripway.com), I guess.
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From this alone, we can't exactly say anything (he could have hacked someone else's account and put that redirect script there---after all, if he has real access to a we
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Click the Parent link on my previous post. He's been popping up all over Slashdot lately.
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No, I'd say you are a perfectly normal user. An uncanny description really.
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Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Funny)
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I'd like to see it hit with a 175lb crossbow!
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Insightful)
Iolo's bows weren't made to be competitive with modern polonium-doped nanocrystalline bolt launchers or whatever, but to recall the craft of medieval weaponsmiths. Still more than enough to shoot your eye out with.
I agree with the other poster who suggested that these LCDs are coming to police riot shields near you. That's just too cool an idea to pass up. Shove enough images of flowers and frolicking puppies in their faces, and the Black Bloc crowd will surrender without a fight, right?
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:4, Funny)
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I could shoot out someone's eye with that, but I could do it with a compound bow with a fifteen pound draw.
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't give a damn how strong the crossbow is. He shot it at the monitor and it bounced off
Re:Crossbow Strength (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess that means I didn't really agree with you much.
Well, why not take your best crossbows and your superior bows and fire them at your own LCD screens and compare your results? You can use any background color you like.
You may need someone to help you aim, as your vision might not be as good as you think, otherwise you may have noticed some other things in that video. Things like the part where the marker is removed from a part of the screen that was displaying white, not red. Or perhaps the part where the same bolts that were able to disable the screen penetrate a half-inch into a sheet of wood. Or perhaps the part where the screen is struck with a hammer.
According to you, this screen fared poorly as "the deep red background that the screen displayed, for example, will tend to hide scratches". Seriously, try these tests yourself. See if any color except black will hide the scratches on your monitors.
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Re:Weeeeee..... (Score:5, Funny)
Warning: Rebounding Wiimotes may cause severe injury.
Here's them firing a .50 cal at the monitor (Score:2, Funny)
Mason Williams's Classical Gas (Score:5, Interesting)
can claim prior art
The Ukrainians' background music was Mason Williams's Classical Gas:
I wonder if they have to pay these things called "royalties" in the Ukraine?
Here is a translation (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to TechnoDay. Is your monitor possessed? How can you tell and if so what can you do about it?
We took a standard LCD monitor that had become possessed after an all night LAN-party playing oblivion. (some discussion about exorcism I could not make out)
We tried writing (the exorcism?) on the screen in permanent marker. But the state of demonic possession prevented the ink from sticking, it just wiped off with a small amount of holy water.
We tried smashing the monitor with a hammer.
Research on Wikipedia told us that the only way to undo the demonic possession was with a silver tipped arrow. Fortunately I was able to win a crossbow on EBay, but the arrows supplied are steel, not silver.
You can see the power of the crossbow shooting into wood. Now lets try against the monitor. One! Two!
As you can see Wikipedia was right, if you are faced with demonic possession you have to go with the silver, steel simply does not work. We will try that next week.
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A "utility patent" must be "new, unique and nonobvious." In late November, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in KSR v. Teleflex -- the case that will determine what constitutes a "nonobvious" invention. We should have a ruling in the next two months.
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It read like foxtrott for me.