And you're right, they don't know what causes it, why are they so quick to say the vaccines aren't connected?
"Are so quick"? Several different Universities have done research on the subject over many years and all came to the same conclusion, Autism rates are the same in people who get vaccines as people who don't.
All I know is high-bandwidth high-latency links tend to want decently sized caches. 512MB of memory with a SSD that can read and write about 500MB/s both ways at the same time, you may want a decent sized cache for sudden bursts or stalls.
I would argue the opposite. In my several history classes that I took in College, they all agreed that most people prior to the industrial revolution only worked about 3-4 hours per day, even going back a few thousand years. The bigger issue was how expensive books were.
That brings up a whole other question. If technology has allowed us to be so much more productive per unit of time, why are we stuck working so many hours and making effectively less money? Slaves in the days of Rome made more money than the lower class does now, as the ratio between the amount slaves got paid to their masters.
If I'm reading you correctly, it sounds like you're describing a "pipeline". I love those designs, and easy to parallelize. Instead of "layers", you have "Stages", that can manipulate the object/message/struct, or can pass it on, but only one state is ever touching a given object/message/struct at a time.
Anyone can program, just like anyone can be a rocket scientist or brain surgeon. The problem is "anyone" doesn't understand why anything does what it does, just that something works. Many people approach their work with "voodoo programming". They don't understand anything.
The problem that arises from this is everyone is running around with a form of hammer and thinks everything is a nail, unless they are told otherwise. Few people can realize when their tool is not best for the job because they do not understand how the tool works.
Many people have knowledge, but few have the understanding to effectively apply their knowledge.
I think one of the changes for Obama care was if you are a company of above a certain size, you must supply health insurance to a certain large percentage of your employees, full-time or not. Whenever this goes into affect, it will be cheaper for Walmart to have a few full-time employees instead of many part-time. Assuming that this part hasn't been removed.
I remember when I was on college, I was a "part-time" employee for a local company and I put in 40-60 hours a week. I was refused certain full-time benefits because of this. I think they got around it because I was considered a "temp", even though I had worked there for a few years strait.
Going from memory from many years back, there was a few very interesting points when I was reading about flywheel research for hybrid F1 racers
1) Something like 90%+ efficient at converting physical energy into rotational and back out
2) Decided to use carbon fiber because instead of turning into shrapnel, it disintegrates when it smashes into its cage
3) Added less weight than an extra person
4) Was able to supply 80hp for 10 seconds at max
5) Was able to quickly and efficiently capture energy, so you could slam on the breaks and get your 80hp for 10 seconds very easily
6) Increased fuel efficiency for F1 racers by 10%-20% because of lots of hard breaking followed by hard acceleration.
I'm sure other safety issues will bring down the effectiveness of these devices for regular car users, but there is a lot of margin to make it an overall win.
It sounds like the school was violating Facebook's Terms of Service, too.
The school has no relationship with Facebook and isn't bound by any terms of service - it's the student who was coerced to violate them.
Knowingly asking someone to violate a civil contract is against the law. If Nvidia went to an AMD engineer and asked them to take a bunch of insider information and was going to pay them for it, Nvidia is asking the AMD engineer to violate a civil contract for whatever secret NDA stuff was signed when that engineer got hired.
Mine was $130/credit with credits after 12 in a semester being free. But the other 90% was paid for by tax-payers. Non-trade students with no degrees got PAID to go to college. Fairly easy state grants for students over the age of 26, and especially parents. They will give you extra money per child to help with costs of being a parent going to school. I knew someone who was making a net profit of over $1,000/sem going to college, and a very well renown one.
I like #7 for regular programming. When working with threads, many times wasting work because the data some times changes, is better than locking on every read to make sure the data hasn't changed. At least when working with relatively small tasks. Works great for heavy-read, almost never write, kinds of workloads.
There's plenty of market where they need something like an SQL server, which is low bandwidth, but the customer doesn't have the funds for a $10k server and $90k/year admin to run it, so they opt for $100/month from a cloud service.
I assume they are indirectly also made of water vapor. That many small droplets of water suspended in an area should cause the immediately local humidity to rise to 100%.
Each pool is made of many people. At best, they would be stealing from themselves. It would be like convincing 50% of a country to try scamming the other 50%.
I live in a small city with a population below 20k and surrounded by miles and miles of farms and trees and our small privately owned local ISP is able to source all of their bandwidth as transit from Level 3 and Global Crossing(Level 3 owned). They do no peering of any kind and can afford to sell dedicated 10/10 for $40/month and 30/30 for $60/month. They do not complain about transit costs for Netflix because it's cheap. If you, as an ISP, cannot get your peering prices below that of transit, you shouldn't be peering. Buy more transit and leave it to the big guys to handle peering.
And before you say anything about small ISPs are subsidied, my ISP has proudly proclaimed that they have turned down all government broadband grants/loans and are building out their fiber network on their own dime, which includes miles past the city limits into the country side.
I live in a poor city with lots of unemployment, and yet our small ISP can easily make money selling dedicated bandwidth from Level 3 to residential users and not doing any peering to reduce costs, while still being cheaper than Charter Communications in many cases.
All it takes is one machine to process a transaction. If these guilds run up the prices to the point that it becomes profitable for lowly home-users to make a profit, then you'll see more people start "mining" again. The only real way these guilds could lock out the little guy is if they controlled more than 50% of the overall processing power, but then they could do much worse things.
Guess what AT&T, the Feds want their money back - you know, the millions they paid out for you to improve your infrastructure, those same millions that you gave your execs as bonuses while doing nothing to improve your infrastructure.
because direct peering with ISP's means netflix can go around level 3 and cogent and save money
it's not like they are paying AT&T and comcast and also paying their Tier 1 providers. netflix is now connecting straight from their data centers to the ISP's on dedicated fiber links and bypassing the Tier 1 networks all together
some idiots can't seem to understand this
At least in the case of Verizon, Netflix said Verizon wants to charge more for peering than Level 3 charges for transit. How does that fit into direct peering saving money?
Doctors will NEVER admit they're wrong.
And you're right, they don't know what causes it, why are they so quick to say the vaccines aren't connected?
"Are so quick"? Several different Universities have done research on the subject over many years and all came to the same conclusion, Autism rates are the same in people who get vaccines as people who don't.
I know ZFS can "deal" with these situations, depending on what you mean by "deal". It won't mess up data that is already committed.
Most non-raid harddrives will no-op the sync write and immediately return, even for top brands. No real way to know.
All I know is high-bandwidth high-latency links tend to want decently sized caches. 512MB of memory with a SSD that can read and write about 500MB/s both ways at the same time, you may want a decent sized cache for sudden bursts or stalls.
Survival took a lot more of everyone's time.
I would argue the opposite. In my several history classes that I took in College, they all agreed that most people prior to the industrial revolution only worked about 3-4 hours per day, even going back a few thousand years. The bigger issue was how expensive books were.
That brings up a whole other question. If technology has allowed us to be so much more productive per unit of time, why are we stuck working so many hours and making effectively less money? Slaves in the days of Rome made more money than the lower class does now, as the ratio between the amount slaves got paid to their masters.
If I'm reading you correctly, it sounds like you're describing a "pipeline". I love those designs, and easy to parallelize. Instead of "layers", you have "Stages", that can manipulate the object/message/struct, or can pass it on, but only one state is ever touching a given object/message/struct at a time.
Anyone can program, just like anyone can be a rocket scientist or brain surgeon. The problem is "anyone" doesn't understand why anything does what it does, just that something works. Many people approach their work with "voodoo programming". They don't understand anything.
The problem that arises from this is everyone is running around with a form of hammer and thinks everything is a nail, unless they are told otherwise. Few people can realize when their tool is not best for the job because they do not understand how the tool works.
Many people have knowledge, but few have the understanding to effectively apply their knowledge.
Not much is "simple" about an electric car. We're not talking about a AA battery and a RC motor.
I think one of the changes for Obama care was if you are a company of above a certain size, you must supply health insurance to a certain large percentage of your employees, full-time or not. Whenever this goes into affect, it will be cheaper for Walmart to have a few full-time employees instead of many part-time. Assuming that this part hasn't been removed.
I remember when I was on college, I was a "part-time" employee for a local company and I put in 40-60 hours a week. I was refused certain full-time benefits because of this. I think they got around it because I was considered a "temp", even though I had worked there for a few years strait.
Imagine the toque exerted with breaking before a turn, from the gyroscopic force.
Going from memory from many years back, there was a few very interesting points when I was reading about flywheel research for hybrid F1 racers
1) Something like 90%+ efficient at converting physical energy into rotational and back out
2) Decided to use carbon fiber because instead of turning into shrapnel, it disintegrates when it smashes into its cage
3) Added less weight than an extra person
4) Was able to supply 80hp for 10 seconds at max
5) Was able to quickly and efficiently capture energy, so you could slam on the breaks and get your 80hp for 10 seconds very easily
6) Increased fuel efficiency for F1 racers by 10%-20% because of lots of hard breaking followed by hard acceleration.
I'm sure other safety issues will bring down the effectiveness of these devices for regular car users, but there is a lot of margin to make it an overall win.
The school has no relationship with Facebook and isn't bound by any terms of service - it's the student who was coerced to violate them.
Knowingly asking someone to violate a civil contract is against the law. If Nvidia went to an AMD engineer and asked them to take a bunch of insider information and was going to pay them for it, Nvidia is asking the AMD engineer to violate a civil contract for whatever secret NDA stuff was signed when that engineer got hired.
Mine was $130/credit with credits after 12 in a semester being free. But the other 90% was paid for by tax-payers. Non-trade students with no degrees got PAID to go to college. Fairly easy state grants for students over the age of 26, and especially parents. They will give you extra money per child to help with costs of being a parent going to school. I knew someone who was making a net profit of over $1,000/sem going to college, and a very well renown one.
I like #7 for regular programming. When working with threads, many times wasting work because the data some times changes, is better than locking on every read to make sure the data hasn't changed. At least when working with relatively small tasks. Works great for heavy-read, almost never write, kinds of workloads.
When I went to school, my adviser said to stay away from diploma mills. For most good jobs, they are worse than not having a degree.
There's plenty of market where they need something like an SQL server, which is low bandwidth, but the customer doesn't have the funds for a $10k server and $90k/year admin to run it, so they opt for $100/month from a cloud service.
I assume they are indirectly also made of water vapor. That many small droplets of water suspended in an area should cause the immediately local humidity to rise to 100%.
I can only have one road connecting to my house meaning an instant monopoly. A private company should never be in the position of having a monopoly.
Each pool is made of many people. At best, they would be stealing from themselves. It would be like convincing 50% of a country to try scamming the other 50%.
I live in a small city with a population below 20k and surrounded by miles and miles of farms and trees and our small privately owned local ISP is able to source all of their bandwidth as transit from Level 3 and Global Crossing(Level 3 owned). They do no peering of any kind and can afford to sell dedicated 10/10 for $40/month and 30/30 for $60/month. They do not complain about transit costs for Netflix because it's cheap. If you, as an ISP, cannot get your peering prices below that of transit, you shouldn't be peering. Buy more transit and leave it to the big guys to handle peering.
And before you say anything about small ISPs are subsidied, my ISP has proudly proclaimed that they have turned down all government broadband grants/loans and are building out their fiber network on their own dime, which includes miles past the city limits into the country side.
I live in a poor city with lots of unemployment, and yet our small ISP can easily make money selling dedicated bandwidth from Level 3 to residential users and not doing any peering to reduce costs, while still being cheaper than Charter Communications in many cases.
All it takes is one machine to process a transaction. If these guilds run up the prices to the point that it becomes profitable for lowly home-users to make a profit, then you'll see more people start "mining" again. The only real way these guilds could lock out the little guy is if they controlled more than 50% of the overall processing power, but then they could do much worse things.
Guess what AT&T, the Feds want their money back - you know, the millions they paid out for you to improve your infrastructure, those same millions that you gave your execs as bonuses while doing nothing to improve your infrastructure.
Yeah, those millions.
"Millions"? Try tens to hundreds of billions.
I don't see how making the 80th percentile is that hard, almost any two person house-hold would qualify assuming a useful college education for both.
"Direct Transit" is an oxymoron. Use the word "peering". Peering is a fraction the cost of transit.
because direct peering with ISP's means netflix can go around level 3 and cogent and save money
it's not like they are paying AT&T and comcast and also paying their Tier 1 providers. netflix is now connecting straight from their data centers to the ISP's on dedicated fiber links and bypassing the Tier 1 networks all together
some idiots can't seem to understand this
At least in the case of Verizon, Netflix said Verizon wants to charge more for peering than Level 3 charges for transit. How does that fit into direct peering saving money?