According to TFA, that's exactly what you'll be seeing.
This technology will be available soon on Kepler-based GeForce graphics cards but will require a monitor with support for G-Sync; not just any display will work. The first launch monitor is a variation on the very popular 144 Hz ASUS VG248QE 1920x1080 display
This was my thought. But typically, where it would make a difference, the whole screen is probably changing anyway. I can still see some advantage to that though.
I guess ultimately, the GPU(s) should be in the monitor and the PCIe bus would be the connection. It appears there's no defined cable length so it would probably require a standards update.
Not really. I'd prefer not to operate in the surrealist world of market manipulation. Allow interest rates to find their own correct level and go from there.
So no, I'm not advocating artificial anything, just pointing out that low interest rates is not a valid aim in and of itself.
Though typically, you don't even expect the mountain to be there. Or it wasn't there last time you passed through the territory. This typically, but not always, occurs with Microsoft products. Last up was when what I had once done with xp_cmdshell in 5 minutes took two days before I gave up and went with a different method.
The truth is, it's probably best to hedge and diversify with a bias towards whatever you think the likely mode or modes of failure are likely to be.
I always shake my head when I watch a show like "Doomsday Preppers" and the prepper in question has optimized their preparations for just one specific type of disaster and is totally blind to any other. If you're not going to prep, fine but if you are, at least be smart about it, it usually wouldn't take a lot more to what they've already done to prepare.
Of course, there was the one where the guy tested for the EMF protection of a steel trashcan by attaching jumper cables from his truck battery to the handles. That had me banging my head on the table.
Bugs me too. I kinda get that people want to use all of their TV but it just looks like crap.
Of course, it doesn't help when the channels send out their pictures ready for a 4:3 screen. But it's a widescreen show. So they add borders on the top and bottom. Leading to borders all around on a *digital* channel on a widescreen TV. Double facepalm for that one.
The background checks you are talking about would apply to private sales and have little effect on manufacturers and retail sellers who already have to perform background checks.
So what you're saying is that people shouldn't have hammers?
Or maybe because you have a hammer doesn't mean that you can't have other tools. Just as having a gun doesn't require that you have to use it for all circumstances.
And
UPDATE 2: ASUS has announced the G-Sync enabled version of the VG248QE will be priced at $399.
So you're not far off there, either.
According to TFA, that's exactly what you'll be seeing.
This technology will be available soon on Kepler-based GeForce graphics cards but will require a monitor with support for G-Sync; not just any display will work. The first launch monitor is a variation on the very popular 144 Hz ASUS VG248QE 1920x1080 display
This was my thought. But typically, where it would make a difference, the whole screen is probably changing anyway. I can still see some advantage to that though.
I guess ultimately, the GPU(s) should be in the monitor and the PCIe bus would be the connection. It appears there's no defined cable length so it would probably require a standards update.
I do think I will be a dick, however, and become a spelling Nazi for your typo of the word "grammar"
Nice try with the link by the way. I guess you decided to ignore this bit:
Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences [...] (Redirected from Nobel prize in economics)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nobel_prize#Prize_in_Economic_Sciences
Although not a Nobel Prize, it is intimately identified with the other awards;
Not really. I'd prefer not to operate in the surrealist world of market manipulation. Allow interest rates to find their own correct level and go from there.
So no, I'm not advocating artificial anything, just pointing out that low interest rates is not a valid aim in and of itself.
Though typically, you don't even expect the mountain to be there. Or it wasn't there last time you passed through the territory. This typically, but not always, occurs with Microsoft products. Last up was when what I had once done with xp_cmdshell in 5 minutes took two days before I gave up and went with a different method.
+1. Uh, I mean INC A
He's not the chief engineer on a vessel designed "to boldly go" by any chance?
What if human beings were not, in some way, a vector?
Though it would seem likely that some of the spread was due to traveling to get away from the plague when one was (unwittingly) infected with it.
Look where Burberry mushroomed their sales.
Chavs?
I'm not sure whether to ROT13 or run it through a Perl interpreter.
Interest rates being kept artificially low is not a good thing. C.f. housing bubble and disappearing savings.
The truth is, it's probably best to hedge and diversify with a bias towards whatever you think the likely mode or modes of failure are likely to be.
I always shake my head when I watch a show like "Doomsday Preppers" and the prepper in question has optimized their preparations for just one specific type of disaster and is totally blind to any other. If you're not going to prep, fine but if you are, at least be smart about it, it usually wouldn't take a lot more to what they've already done to prepare.
Of course, there was the one where the guy tested for the EMF protection of a steel trashcan by attaching jumper cables from his truck battery to the handles. That had me banging my head on the table.
Sorry, there is no economic Nobel. Stick around though, you might get a peace one.
And yet it is a word that has a meaning that fits with the way it was used in the sentence. Funny that.
Maybe it is a bipolar bear.
Bear in mind that sailors were supplied with a ration of rum and hadn't seen women for months.
Tink different!
Bugs me too. I kinda get that people want to use all of their TV but it just looks like crap.
Of course, it doesn't help when the channels send out their pictures ready for a 4:3 screen. But it's a widescreen show. So they add borders on the top and bottom. Leading to borders all around on a *digital* channel on a widescreen TV. Double facepalm for that one.
The iphones [...] water adverse [...] is why its profitable but unpopular.
Thank heavens for the new software update then.
The background checks you are talking about would apply to private sales and have little effect on manufacturers and retail sellers who already have to perform background checks.
So what you're saying is that people shouldn't have hammers?
Or maybe because you have a hammer doesn't mean that you can't have other tools. Just as having a gun doesn't require that you have to use it for all circumstances.