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Mircea Neacsu wrote: I've been running an AIS receiver feeding data to MarineTraffic (and aishub.net) for the past 10 years. Great, then you should have no problem determining which vessel classification is being tracked on the map.
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Seem to be only military/Coast Guard vessels but the URL suggests it's from 2013. Not sure I get it.
Tracking military ships is notoriously difficult as they turn off the AIS and go dark. At least they have good reasons to. Other ships do it for far more nefarious reasons.
Mircea
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Mircea Neacsu wrote: Seem to be only military/Coast Guard vessels To me, it looks like anything but rowboats are included ... If there exists a rowboat with an AIS transmitter, I guess it is included as well, probably in the "Pleasure Craft" category.
Some of those "Pleasure Craft" vessels does not look like dead serious entries, judged by the AIS information they supply! Seems like the only requirement for transmitting AIS signals is that you can afford the transmitter. No formal requirements. If there are any at all, they must be extremely loose. It takes a lot more to obtain a CB or VHF license!
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Here in Canada you would get slapped with a hefty fine if you try to operate a VHF transmitter without proper license. And yes, they do monitor the frequency spectrum. Don't ask how I know that
SOLAS (Safety of Life at Sea Conventions) requires all ships of over 300 tonnes to have an AIS. Smaller crafts can have it but it's not required. In principle, once you have your VHF license you can install an AIS without much fuss.
Mircea
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Looks like a go-to website for Somalian pirates!
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My god, can someone do something about all those dutch pirates!
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Fortunately, Navtex (which is mandatory for a number of vessel classes) is prepared for this: Subject indicator "D" heads "Search & rescue information, and pirate warnings" (Wikipedia: Navtex[^])
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Yes, something really must be done. They have descended to even greater depths of depravity, and now work for the tax authorities.
Freedom is the freedom to say that two plus two make four. If that is granted, all else follows.
-- 6079 Smith W.
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Finally, vikings are adhering to modern standards. Those longboats really needed some XXI century technology!
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It's sort of coding, right? There's a scripting engine, and a bunch of "database records"
It's kind of a guilty pleasure and I'm just curious, because I've contributed some mods to nexusmods (High Level Perks Modular and Full editions, Brews, and a few others) and I wonder if others here have too? It seems like the kind of thing some people around here might enjoy.
For those of you that haven't touched Fallout 4, it's kind of fun because you can replace all the content in the game with your own, and add your own logic to it and quests and such. it's coding but not, and game development these days require tons of effort before you get something satisfying, so sometimes it can be more gratifying to modify an existing game and produce new content for it. It's why I love Fallout 4 so much.
Real programmers use butterflies
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No reply is a reply all on its own!
If you can't laugh at yourself - ask me and I will do it for you.
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I'm kind of surprised at that, actually, given the nature of Fallout 4. Of course, I keep forgetting a lot of people on here probably get sick of coding in their downtime whereas I'm relentless. FO4 in its own way is just another dev platform.
Real programmers use butterflies
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I'm nowhere near as ambitious.
I'm into GTA Online, and frankly I'd be happy if I could merely read my own data from it. I know they have a nice REST API that their Social Club uses to read a tons of stats, and I know someone documented quite a bit of it years ago, but it seems like their authentication has changed and what little I can find no longer works.
And I'm not gonna risk hammering their system with trial and error requests using my only account--at some point I suspect they'd just shut it down...
wink wink nudge nudge...anyone know any of that?
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I don't see a math forum, so I'll tack on another math question here if anyone is familiar with abstract algebra and/or category theory.
I've been learning category theory and have gotten stumped when learning about different characteristics of morphisms - specifically monomorphisms and epimorphisms. A monomorphism is defined as "a morphism f: X -> Y such that for all objects Z and all morphisms g1, g2: Z -> X, f o g1 = f o g2 implies g1 = g2." In English, it means that if we take a morphism f and compose it with any two morphisms "leading into" f, if the results are equal that implies the two morphisms are equal. It's basically the injective (or 1-to-1) property but for morphisms. An epimorphism is the same idea but for morphisms that f "leads into." It's basically the surjective (or onto) property but for morphisms.
So here's where I'm confused: it's beaten into your head in textbooks to not think of categories and objects as concrete. The whole point is the morphisms. But how can you show characteristics like monomorphic or epimorphic behavior without analyzing the morphisms in a concrete object context? If you don't, how can you 1) guarantee the category is even equipped with the concept of equality? (not everything is a setoid), and 2) show that the equality holds per the mono- and/or epi-morphic definition?
I hope that makes some sense. I'm still very much in the learning stage on this topic
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Haaa, I don't have an answer. But maybe @Stefan63. He helped me several times for math question here in an excellent way
Same is valid for @Andreas-Gieriet
modified 21-Jan-22 16:16pm.
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Thats better than me, I thought it was the dude on "The Matrix"
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That's morpheus, not morphism
M.D.V.
If something has a solution... Why do we have to worry about?. If it has no solution... For what reason do we have to worry about?
Help me to understand what I'm saying, and I'll explain it better to you
Rating helpful answers is nice, but saying thanks can be even nicer.
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Ehhh a message from Nelek. I was about to miss you
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