I was still using 33 on Windows until I read your message. At the time, I also did not have any arrows. Reloaded Chrome to apply 34, and now they're back.
I have to agree. I love my $15/month 1080p time-shifted TV. I no longer have to watch TV when it happens and I don't need my own DVR. My ISP automatically allows me to go back up-to 48 hours on most channels. DVR is required to manually time-shift any other channel.
You don't want to replace/upgrade everything ever 10-15 years. Fiber in short-run residential areas that don't require more than 100km ranges, has an expected lifetime of 50-100 years. They are currently replacing and upgrading copper infrastructure every 3-8 years and copper infrastructure is more expensive than fiber. Really, you can purchase 144 strand fiber cables with an embedded wire for finding in the ground, for about $0.2/meter, while a single COAX cable will run you around $2.5/meter. That's not including that a single strand of fiber can carry magnitudes more data than the COAX and requires less maintenance and more reliable.
Google fiber is using WDM to get 40gb/s over their fiber. Each of 32 customers sharing a strand of fiber gets their own 1.25gb/s lamda.
The same argument can be made for Electricity, cars, and society. GASP! What did people do before they had other people to depend on?! Why we lived in small warring clans.
"municipal internet pipe" That's not what they were talking about. The Internet pipe is the trunk, what the article was talking about was the municipal handling the last mile. In the end, it should look something like this Customer->Municipal Last Mile->Exchange->ISP->Internet Where multiple ISPs can connect to the Exchange. In this setup, a customer could have multiple ISPs over the same connection.
Not to say it's widely accepted, but the research I've seen about supplements and anti-oxidants is that you can't isolate a single anti-oxidant and expect it to work. They tend to work better when you have tends of thousands of different anti-oxidants. Most dark colors plants or fruits tends to have huge numbers of different anti-oxidants and they compliment each other to the point that any single anti-oxidant is almost useless.
Matter of all kinds is just energy and in the beginning, the only thing that existed was energy. As matter and anti-matter was created from this abundance of energy, they would collide with each other and turn back into energy, then that energy would turn back into matter and anti-matter. This oscillation between energy and general matter would continue until the expansion of space would cause the density of energy to drop below the threshold to create matter.
All of our current physics shows all matter has a pair and anti-pair and they are exactly a 50/50 split. Assuming matter and anti-matter are not special, we should, on average, see a 50/50 split between matter and anti-matter. Like you said, where the two types came in contact, they would destroy themselves, but in any given local region, there should be a general "winner". We should observe a 50/50 mixture of regions with matter or anti-matter, but not both at the same time. Instead, all we see is matter, everywhere.
The only thing that comes to my mind is positrons are the only particle that I've heard described as mathematically "going backwards in time". I am not a physicist, but having not heard this description for other particle pairs, it makes me wonder if something is special about what we call "anti-matter".
As far as we can tell, the Universe is symmetrical, so stating that we didn't have equal parts indicates that our physics is wrong or matter/anti-matter are an exception to all other particles, which is the opposite of Occam's Razor.
"Linux" refers to whatever people want it to refer to. Language is decided by the majority and you're the minority, meaning you're using it incorrectly.
My ISP uses Ethernet based Cisco set-top boxes. You can't buy these devices anywhere unless you're an ISP, and they're proprietary. I must say though, they work great and I'm paying $15/month for Basic 1080p TV + time shifting + Free VoD, which includes 3 of such devices. They have got to be worth $100-$200 per device, and I'm only paying $15/month for 3 of them plus the services. It's going to take my ISP 2-3 years just to break even.
Wife has to watch Dancing with the Stars and Bachelor/Bachelorette and the time these shows run conflict with raid time and ABC.com no longer works for us for streaming. Now she can watch it up to 48 hours after the show airs with our time-shifting.
Using pure logic is a slippery slope because "fun" is not "logical". While we're on the subject, ethics aren't logical either. Nutshell, don't bring logic into an argument about entertainment. If someone wants something, that's all that matters. He wants to watch sports, then don't sarcastically point out that he could just listen.
the world's favorite intelligence agency may have also stood in the way of stronger network layer security
But that is misleading. The NSA did not "stand in the way". The just declined to help. That is not the same thing.
Maybe by your standards. Kind of like being next to someone who's breathing machine came unplugged, yet you refuse to help by walking over and plugging it in. At some point, in-action is as bad as action. Those with the power to easily help with no risk or effort, yet don't, are just as bad as those who purposefully are bad.
If you're using bcrypt or some other stretcher, the last thing you're thinking about is efficiency. The whole point of a stretcher is to be inefficient.
If it's not one of the newer designs, like thorium, I would also like it shutdown. All nuclear power plants should be using modern negative-feedback self-limiting designs that consume most of their fuel, resulting in relatively short lived radioactive waste.
Didn't fool me. Subversion wouldn't be eating their own dog-food and that would reduce their ability to properly expand it. What better testing of something than to actually use it day-to-day? This would akin to Linus using FreeBSD. He would start to lose touch.
My last consumer grade router's port forwarding UI gave a list of devices. If you selected to forward a port range to that device, it would add an entry to the "Advanced" page that used the MAC address. The advanced page let either MAC or IP address be used for port forwarding. The MAC was used for DHCP reasons, so it could auto-populate the forwarding rule to that device in case the DHCP lease changed the IP.
Using ZFS arguments, most VM type servers have way too much CPU and not enough memory or IO. ZFS can do 2GB/s per core for compression. I assume a similar thing happens with this "zram" feature. Plenty of CPU and not enough IO. Compress it, lots of memory is full of zeros with all of that padding going on.
I assume that the major work types of computers involve little memory being actively use. I bet a lot of it is just allocated and has data filling it up, but not being used. Compress it.
Reminds me of viewing porn as a child and watching the images slowly "come into focus".
I was still using 33 on Windows until I read your message. At the time, I also did not have any arrows. Reloaded Chrome to apply 34, and now they're back.
I have to agree. I love my $15/month 1080p time-shifted TV. I no longer have to watch TV when it happens and I don't need my own DVR. My ISP automatically allows me to go back up-to 48 hours on most channels. DVR is required to manually time-shift any other channel.
You don't want to replace/upgrade everything ever 10-15 years. Fiber in short-run residential areas that don't require more than 100km ranges, has an expected lifetime of 50-100 years. They are currently replacing and upgrading copper infrastructure every 3-8 years and copper infrastructure is more expensive than fiber. Really, you can purchase 144 strand fiber cables with an embedded wire for finding in the ground, for about $0.2/meter, while a single COAX cable will run you around $2.5/meter. That's not including that a single strand of fiber can carry magnitudes more data than the COAX and requires less maintenance and more reliable.
Google fiber is using WDM to get 40gb/s over their fiber. Each of 32 customers sharing a strand of fiber gets their own 1.25gb/s lamda.
The same argument can be made for Electricity, cars, and society. GASP! What did people do before they had other people to depend on?! Why we lived in small warring clans.
Sounds great! Have fun!
"municipal internet pipe" That's not what they were talking about. The Internet pipe is the trunk, what the article was talking about was the municipal handling the last mile. In the end, it should look something like this Customer->Municipal Last Mile->Exchange->ISP->Internet Where multiple ISPs can connect to the Exchange. In this setup, a customer could have multiple ISPs over the same connection.
We don't live in a world where most people are illiterate and working 60 hour weeks.
When did that ever happen? Last time the world was full of illiterate people, they only worked 16 hours a week.
Not to say it's widely accepted, but the research I've seen about supplements and anti-oxidants is that you can't isolate a single anti-oxidant and expect it to work. They tend to work better when you have tends of thousands of different anti-oxidants. Most dark colors plants or fruits tends to have huge numbers of different anti-oxidants and they compliment each other to the point that any single anti-oxidant is almost useless.
Matter of all kinds is just energy and in the beginning, the only thing that existed was energy. As matter and anti-matter was created from this abundance of energy, they would collide with each other and turn back into energy, then that energy would turn back into matter and anti-matter. This oscillation between energy and general matter would continue until the expansion of space would cause the density of energy to drop below the threshold to create matter.
All of our current physics shows all matter has a pair and anti-pair and they are exactly a 50/50 split. Assuming matter and anti-matter are not special, we should, on average, see a 50/50 split between matter and anti-matter. Like you said, where the two types came in contact, they would destroy themselves, but in any given local region, there should be a general "winner". We should observe a 50/50 mixture of regions with matter or anti-matter, but not both at the same time. Instead, all we see is matter, everywhere.
The only thing that comes to my mind is positrons are the only particle that I've heard described as mathematically "going backwards in time". I am not a physicist, but having not heard this description for other particle pairs, it makes me wonder if something is special about what we call "anti-matter".
As far as we can tell, the Universe is symmetrical, so stating that we didn't have equal parts indicates that our physics is wrong or matter/anti-matter are an exception to all other particles, which is the opposite of Occam's Razor.
Finally, news that matters.
"Linux" refers to whatever people want it to refer to. Language is decided by the majority and you're the minority, meaning you're using it incorrectly.
My ISP uses Ethernet based Cisco set-top boxes. You can't buy these devices anywhere unless you're an ISP, and they're proprietary. I must say though, they work great and I'm paying $15/month for Basic 1080p TV + time shifting + Free VoD, which includes 3 of such devices. They have got to be worth $100-$200 per device, and I'm only paying $15/month for 3 of them plus the services. It's going to take my ISP 2-3 years just to break even.
Wife has to watch Dancing with the Stars and Bachelor/Bachelorette and the time these shows run conflict with raid time and ABC.com no longer works for us for streaming. Now she can watch it up to 48 hours after the show airs with our time-shifting.
I was going to say: No loitering + higher costs != "no cost to watch"
Using pure logic is a slippery slope because "fun" is not "logical". While we're on the subject, ethics aren't logical either. Nutshell, don't bring logic into an argument about entertainment. If someone wants something, that's all that matters. He wants to watch sports, then don't sarcastically point out that he could just listen.
the world's favorite intelligence agency may have also stood in the way of stronger network layer security
But that is misleading. The NSA did not "stand in the way". The just declined to help. That is not the same thing.
Maybe by your standards. Kind of like being next to someone who's breathing machine came unplugged, yet you refuse to help by walking over and plugging it in. At some point, in-action is as bad as action. Those with the power to easily help with no risk or effort, yet don't, are just as bad as those who purposefully are bad.
Mmmm.. QuakeSpy. TF, go! Ping 4 concurrent servers, filter for pings below 300, load from x, y, and z server list. Come back 15 minutes later.
Linus owns the trademark to Linux, so RedHat could not claim to be Linux if Linus decided.
Variety is the spice of life.
Next up, compiled java that doesn't churn through memory.
and needs to do so reasonably efficiently
If you're using bcrypt or some other stretcher, the last thing you're thinking about is efficiency. The whole point of a stretcher is to be inefficient.
If it's not one of the newer designs, like thorium, I would also like it shutdown. All nuclear power plants should be using modern negative-feedback self-limiting designs that consume most of their fuel, resulting in relatively short lived radioactive waste.
Didn't fool me. Subversion wouldn't be eating their own dog-food and that would reduce their ability to properly expand it. What better testing of something than to actually use it day-to-day? This would akin to Linus using FreeBSD. He would start to lose touch.
My last consumer grade router's port forwarding UI gave a list of devices. If you selected to forward a port range to that device, it would add an entry to the "Advanced" page that used the MAC address. The advanced page let either MAC or IP address be used for port forwarding. The MAC was used for DHCP reasons, so it could auto-populate the forwarding rule to that device in case the DHCP lease changed the IP.
Using ZFS arguments, most VM type servers have way too much CPU and not enough memory or IO. ZFS can do 2GB/s per core for compression. I assume a similar thing happens with this "zram" feature. Plenty of CPU and not enough IO. Compress it, lots of memory is full of zeros with all of that padding going on.
I assume that the major work types of computers involve little memory being actively use. I bet a lot of it is just allocated and has data filling it up, but not being used. Compress it.