Don't remember the title/author, but there was a book where the rest of the galactic universe was relatively at peace because all their planets had only ONE continent, so there was no division of ecosystems on land.
Profs: If you want to ban laptops, then you need to go after cell phones, pagers, and everything else a student can bring in. I don't care about the result, as long as its uniform. You may be required to change your teaching methods, to engage more students.
Students: If you can't pay attention in class, it could be that's your problem. You may need to focus on the class and not care what screensavers are running on laptops, since you'll have to do the same thing when you are done with school. Or gang up on the Facebook students and ask them to be more polite.
Put the desks facing each other, but with a wall at 5 to 6 feet high between each. They can have the privacy they may want, and to ask others opinions, they can call out or stand up. Or ask them, but be prepared for 1 to say "Open" and another to say "Closed" and 2 to not care.
I guess the flaw is only important enough for submitter to complain about, not to actually do something about. Most likely bad phrasing/understanding by submitter or developer.
When in IT, weekly I'd get a "My document won't print", when it sometimes gets traced back to "Actually, you can't open your document".
I've had problems with some open source projects, and between my explanation or the developer understanding, it was "can't reproduce". Then I submit a test case that repeats it all the time, and developer goes "Oh, that way. Yup, broken", and the fix comes in soon.
Have an artist file suit against whoever filed the DCMA paperwork. The artist should be entitled to the "lost sales" of the artists work on the same level of damages the RIAA claim.
Not really the cheap you intend, but USA military often removes the RoHS solder for the old fashioned lead solder. They do this because there is a LOT of data to back up the lead solder, and lead-free solder hasn't been studied enough. Their putting trusting something they know (good and bad on lead) instead of an unknown (lead-free).
....."approximately 500 employees. There are 30 people on the IT staff"..... That's a LOT of IT people, from what I've been told. For 120 employees, we did well with 2 IT staff (1.5 on help desk and 0.5 on development). By that ratio, you'd need a total of 12.
from TFA : "...but a cloak that perfectly hides objects at all wavelengths of radiation — including AM radio waves, visible light and X-rays — would be extremely difficult to create..."
How about ultrasonic sensors? Or rain, like another message says. Ground pressure or vibration.
I think something with enough sensitivity (like a cloaked object going past a stationary LIDAR gun beam) could see some disturbance that wasn't there before. If the light is bending around an object, it may be invisible but the light would be taking longer to make the trip. A properly tuned laser beam frequency with matching receiver could probably detect cloaked objects too.
So much of this is by "cloaked to a person" and not to sensors.
Coworker had a pacemaker put in. Said she held on to two connectors and they could change the rate by sending signals through one arm, through the pacemaker to the receiver in the other.
I joked with the tone generator (for phone equipment) with other employees, but not with her.
The following is copied from a previous Cogent/Spint debacle posting:
Just like what happened with Level(3) a few years ago.
Cogent's history in the ISP market has been absolutely horrible. They came in to town as the Walmart of ISPs, investing in a huge new super-efficient backbone infrastructure doing everything it could to cut costs so they could offer insane deals to their customers. They were running 10Gigabit connections using existing fiber and brand new equipment. They had no 'legacy' hardware.
The hosting industry bit into the Cogent game when they had customers running multimedia sites that needed tons of bandwidth (see: porn) and were tired of paying insane rates per mbps when Cogent had this brand new network with tons of capacity.
But Cogent wasn't in the 'settlement free interconnect' game yet, they were paying for bandwidth themselves. So they went out and purchased a few ISPs that already had settlement free interconnects. The agreements are already in place, so it was a big win situation for them. But these agreements almost always come with the term that you must give as much as you receive (so you need to have a balance between hosted sites and end users.) Cogent didn't have end users, they had servers.
Think of it this way: I am an apartment complex and I have an agreement to mow my neighbor's lawn and in exchange he shovels my sidewalk. It uses approximately the same amount of work. Now imagine my neighbor and all of his agreements are bought by the local golf course. Now the golf course now expects me to mow the entire course because the agreement was that they would shovel and I would mow. Cogent was the golf course, I am an ISP.
Now in my apartment I house a bunch of golfers once I say "screw this, figure out your lawn situation yourself" the course says "ok, well, I guess your tenants are going to have to go without golf." What the hell am I to do now? Mow this golf course to keep my tenants happy?
Finally I come to an agreement, the golf course has to pay me a small amount and I will mow their grass. Everything seems OK, but then the golf course gets in to a bit of trouble and all of a sudden decides "OK, well... he doesn't want his tenants to go without golf so he will probably keep mowing our grass even if we stop paying him." Here we are again, I'm in an impossible situation because I really care about my tenants but man, I just cannot mow an entire golf course all by myself. So I send the golf course warnings after warnings, and after I reach a tipping point I just say "GFY, I'm not mowing your course anymore." I stop mowing it, and the golf course says "IT IS TOTALLY HIS FAULT THAT YOU CANNOT PLAY GOLF!!!"
Right now a lot of ISPs can hit Cogent's old pricing (and Cogent just cannot go any lower than they already are) so a lot if ISPs will just pass on Cogent and go for someone with a better record.
There is a lot more to the story that we don't know about, and since these agreements are generally done under a NDA we will never know for sure what exactly is happening at Cogent.
Just a FYI: I work for a hosting company that has had some dealings with Cogent in the past.
1. My character takes a picture of an non-descript window, while looking conspicious (acting like a cadet spy). 2. Your character notes this, goes to a secret area (like a pro spy), contacts your agency saying I'm a spy. 3. You get 2 points, I get -2 points.
Much like detecting terrorists by facial recognition, this is vaporware until they publish some numbers.
I once had someone misplace a sales call to me, being proud his facial recognition system was 70% accurate. He had no idea how much his system is a pain in the ass when its wrong, and for the airport security business he was trying to get, 90% accuracy is considered terrible.
I went to a seminar on robotics 2 months ago. I knew the presenter from a robot project 3 years ago, he set the robot on the table clamped it down, started it up, and it swung around to punch a hole in the wall into the other room.
The presenter later said the last time he used the robot he was demo-ing a high speed move, and for got to set it to low speed before putting it away.
Presentation hall was not pleased.... We found it hilarious.
But I feel what GP was saying is that just by providing 58.44 without context which one is it? 1. mole of sodium chloride in grams 2. the area of a circle with radius 4.313... 3. double 29.22 4. anything that could include a ratio of 3,13,or 149 in any combination (factors of 5844)
And I think a more precise number for mole of sodium chloride is 58.443, so what level of precision is required to get what result????
While I was in IT, there would be blocked messages from employees to other employees. Flagged as spam. Usually the sales or service departments.
Each one had something like "Come look at our new product at " or some such for 3 lines as a signature. If I didn't know these people, I'd flag it as spam.
I remember Mouser-Mecha-Catbot getting caught in the corner with the 200 pound sledge. Pounded _flat_ with the arena operator laughing maniacally, and the owner pounding on the arena to get his bot out. The match was done and there was a winner, but the carnage continued.
machete : a large heavy knife used for cutting sugarcane and underbrush and as a weapon vs papier-mache : a light strong molding material of wastepaper pulped with glue and other additives
Don't remember the title/author, but there was a book where the rest of the galactic universe was relatively at peace because all their planets had only ONE continent, so there was no division of ecosystems on land.
For those that still want to see this, the video needs Flash Player 9, and shut of Privoxy.
Profs:
If you want to ban laptops, then you need to go after cell phones, pagers, and everything else a student can bring in. I don't care about the result, as long as its uniform.
You may be required to change your teaching methods, to engage more students.
Students:
If you can't pay attention in class, it could be that's your problem. You may need to focus on the class and not care what screensavers are running on laptops, since you'll have to do the same thing when you are done with school.
Or gang up on the Facebook students and ask them to be more polite.
Put the desks facing each other, but with a wall at 5 to 6 feet high between each. They can have the privacy they may want, and to ask others opinions, they can call out or stand up.
Or ask them, but be prepared for 1 to say "Open" and another to say "Closed" and 2 to not care.
I guess the flaw is only important enough for submitter to complain about, not to actually do something about. Most likely bad phrasing/understanding by submitter or developer.
When in IT, weekly I'd get a "My document won't print", when it sometimes gets traced back to "Actually, you can't open your document".
I've had problems with some open source projects, and between my explanation or the developer understanding, it was "can't reproduce". Then I submit a test case that repeats it all the time, and developer goes "Oh, that way. Yup, broken", and the fix comes in soon.
[citation requested]
Have an artist file suit against whoever filed the DCMA paperwork.
The artist should be entitled to the "lost sales" of the artists work on the same level of damages the RIAA claim.
I had a boss in the "big game animal" category. He bought two seats for each flight. He still was never comfortable, being over 6 feet tall like me.
Not really the cheap you intend, but USA military often removes the RoHS solder for the old fashioned lead solder. They do this because there is a LOT of data to back up the lead solder, and lead-free solder hasn't been studied enough. Their putting trusting something they know (good and bad on lead) instead of an unknown (lead-free).
....."approximately 500 employees. There are 30 people on the IT staff".....
That's a LOT of IT people, from what I've been told. For 120 employees, we did well with 2 IT staff (1.5 on help desk and 0.5 on development).
By that ratio, you'd need a total of 12.
Anyone else think this number is a bit high?
All the talk will be "It would have been better without piracy", which would unfortunately be correct....
from TFA : "...but a cloak that perfectly hides objects at all wavelengths of radiation — including AM radio waves, visible light and X-rays — would be extremely difficult to create..."
How about ultrasonic sensors? Or rain, like another message says. Ground pressure or vibration.
I think something with enough sensitivity (like a cloaked object going past a stationary LIDAR gun beam) could see some disturbance that wasn't there before. If the light is bending around an object, it may be invisible but the light would be taking longer to make the trip.
A properly tuned laser beam frequency with matching receiver could probably detect cloaked objects too.
So much of this is by "cloaked to a person" and not to sensors.
Coworker had a pacemaker put in. Said she held on to two connectors and they could change the rate by sending signals through one arm, through the pacemaker to the receiver in the other.
I joked with the tone generator (for phone equipment) with other employees, but not with her.
The following is copied from a previous Cogent/Spint debacle posting:
Just like what happened with Level(3) a few years ago.
Cogent's history in the ISP market has been absolutely horrible. They came in to town as the Walmart of ISPs, investing in a huge new super-efficient backbone infrastructure doing everything it could to cut costs so they could offer insane deals to their customers. They were running 10Gigabit connections using existing fiber and brand new equipment. They had no 'legacy' hardware.
The hosting industry bit into the Cogent game when they had customers running multimedia sites that needed tons of bandwidth (see: porn) and were tired of paying insane rates per mbps when Cogent had this brand new network with tons of capacity.
But Cogent wasn't in the 'settlement free interconnect' game yet, they were paying for bandwidth themselves. So they went out and purchased a few ISPs that already had settlement free interconnects. The agreements are already in place, so it was a big win situation for them. But these agreements almost always come with the term that you must give as much as you receive (so you need to have a balance between hosted sites and end users.) Cogent didn't have end users, they had servers.
Think of it this way: I am an apartment complex and I have an agreement to mow my neighbor's lawn and in exchange he shovels my sidewalk. It uses approximately the same amount of work. Now imagine my neighbor and all of his agreements are bought by the local golf course. Now the golf course now expects me to mow the entire course because the agreement was that they would shovel and I would mow. Cogent was the golf course, I am an ISP.
Now in my apartment I house a bunch of golfers once I say "screw this, figure out your lawn situation yourself" the course says "ok, well, I guess your tenants are going to have to go without golf." What the hell am I to do now? Mow this golf course to keep my tenants happy?
Finally I come to an agreement, the golf course has to pay me a small amount and I will mow their grass. Everything seems OK, but then the golf course gets in to a bit of trouble and all of a sudden decides "OK, well... he doesn't want his tenants to go without golf so he will probably keep mowing our grass even if we stop paying him." Here we are again, I'm in an impossible situation because I really care about my tenants but man, I just cannot mow an entire golf course all by myself. So I send the golf course warnings after warnings, and after I reach a tipping point I just say "GFY, I'm not mowing your course anymore." I stop mowing it, and the golf course says "IT IS TOTALLY HIS FAULT THAT YOU CANNOT PLAY GOLF!!!"
Right now a lot of ISPs can hit Cogent's old pricing (and Cogent just cannot go any lower than they already are) so a lot if ISPs will just pass on Cogent and go for someone with a better record.
There is a lot more to the story that we don't know about, and since these agreements are generally done under a NDA we will never know for sure what exactly is happening at Cogent.
Just a FYI: I work for a hosting company that has had some dealings with Cogent in the past.
1. My character takes a picture of an non-descript window, while looking conspicious (acting like a cadet spy).
2. Your character notes this, goes to a secret area (like a pro spy), contacts your agency saying I'm a spy.
3. You get 2 points, I get -2 points.
Much like detecting terrorists by facial recognition, this is vaporware until they publish some numbers.
I once had someone misplace a sales call to me, being proud his facial recognition system was 70% accurate. He had no idea how much his system is a pain in the ass when its wrong, and for the airport security business he was trying to get, 90% accuracy is considered terrible.
http://www.cfnews13.com/News/Local/2009/9/5/where39s_waldo_the_answer_could_net_you_500.html
and
http://www.mote.org/index.php?src=news&submenu=NEWS&srctype=detail&category=Newsroom&refno=295
$500 reward for finding it....
I didn't RTFA.
When I'm playing a driving game, I'm looking at the road and don't see the signs much because my focus of attention is narrowed to the road.
When playing the same game for running over pedestrians, I'm looking all over to find where they are.
They want to do advertising, then put it ON the road.
I went to a seminar on robotics 2 months ago. I knew the presenter from a robot project 3 years ago, he set the robot on the table clamped it down, started it up, and it swung around to punch a hole in the wall into the other room.
The presenter later said the last time he used the robot he was demo-ing a high speed move, and for got to set it to low speed before putting it away.
Presentation hall was not pleased.... We found it hilarious.
But I feel what GP was saying is that just by providing 58.44 without context which one is it?
1. mole of sodium chloride in grams
2. the area of a circle with radius 4.313...
3. double 29.22
4. anything that could include a ratio of 3,13,or 149 in any combination (factors of 5844)
And I think a more precise number for mole of sodium chloride is 58.443, so what level of precision is required to get what result????
Sorry to say, but crushing loneliness is only crushing because you let it do so.
I never tried to find people, and on weekends I stayed at home for the entire weekend without going outside. Loved it for 20 years.
Got married recently, spend a lot of weekends with other people I don't prefer sometimes. Love that too for 6 years now.
While I was in IT, there would be blocked messages from employees to other employees. Flagged as spam. Usually the sales or service departments.
Each one had something like "Come look at our new product at " or some such for 3 lines as a signature. If I didn't know these people, I'd flag it as spam.
I remember Mouser-Mecha-Catbot getting caught in the corner with the 200 pound sledge. Pounded _flat_ with the arena operator laughing maniacally, and the owner pounding on the arena to get his bot out. The match was done and there was a winner, but the carnage continued.
Double check that please:
machete : a large heavy knife used for cutting sugarcane and underbrush and as a weapon
vs
papier-mache : a light strong molding material of wastepaper pulped with glue and other additives
Except for the people who put vibration inducers on the windows.....
I know some of these people.