I don't think people quite understand the issue. It's not sick time. I'm one of only 2-3 neurosurgeons in a the hospital at a given time and there is so much critical work that we're all needed there at once. To have someone cover me would be problematic since they are already working 80-100 hours per week already, so they would go over the policy limits for work hours, or at the very least be very very unhappy about it.
So, because of bad management practices you would rather work yourself to death and put others in jeopardy health wise? How do you take vacations? What happens if you get hit by a bus?
If you and your peers are consistently working 80 to 100 hours a week then you guys are just plain crazy. All of you will be burned out within 2 years and end up with your own health problems. There is obviously enough work to hire more employees. If management is saying that they can't find talent, then they are probably not trying hard enough. At the very least, I'm sure that there are young talented doctors out there that you could train and mentor.
Calling in sick does nothing but make my life harder. I feel bad about it
There's your problem right there. If you're sick, you're sick. You already feel bad, so beating yourself up for staying home is just giving in to this ridiculous work ethic. And that work ethic? It's nothing but crude mind control. We're told that we're supposed to have a special "ethic" that means if you're not suffering, you're not earning your pay. And if your job requires you to get a doctor's excuse to take a day off work, you need to give notice tomorrow and find another job.
The corporatists have done a number on your head. Resist it.
If I'm sick, I stay home. No sense in passing what I have to the rest of my coworkers. The reality is that it's actually best for the company if I do. Which would they rather happen, one worker stays home for a couple of days to recover or that person goes to work and they lose productivity from 10 others that then get sick...
This finding goes to show that even smart people are stupid even about the most basic things and that familiarity breeds contempt. I wonder how much of this has to do with the Doctors being around sick patients all of the time and getting complacent. The worse part is that they could compromise someone whose immune system is already weak from another disease.
Hold it when corporations merge with government it's fascism
When government merges with corporations it's socialism
Good to have that cleared up, I have never been clear on the difference.
Think of it as right-totalitarianism vs. left-totalitarianism. One's mostly concerned with your bedroom activities, and the other's concerned about your bankbook. The problem is your bankbook can impact your bedroom activities, or vice versa, so eventually fascism/socialism have to regulate those activities as well. Hence the cause for your confusion. The difference is probably more easily explained using cows.
i'm 41. and people who meet me for the first time think i'm in my mid 20's. same with my wife. don't drink more than once or twice a month, exercise, avoid eating out all the time and avoid processed foods. stay away from milk, sugar and gluten. cook for yourself and don't buy the prepared foods
I drank milk all the time as a kid and still do (1% now). I also look to be 10 to 15 years younger than my age.
Giving up anything (sugar, meat, milk, gluten) can have a placebo effect. You feel better because you are taking control, exercising more, etc.
There are people who legitimately have various levels of sensitivity towards certain foods (peanuts is one of the more common). There are also people who eat too much which can cause problems such as Diabetes, becoming overweight, not having energy, etc. I agree that for these people, a special diet may be needed for them to be healthy.
I look younger than my chronological age and my diet consists of a bit of everything, including milk, veggies, meat, bread, processed foods, and my sweet tooth for chocolate.
Being active and all things in moderation is my motto....
Just out of curiosity, what do you think the proper homonym phrase is for this?
From grammarist.com it should be "free rein" as in a horse being able to do what they want because the reins are free. "reign" is a recent misspelling that is being used more often.
... for the glowing hockey puck.... and the glowing golf ball (US Open).... Both of which are/were stupid ideas.... No... not hockey and golf.... the glowy part...
At least the technology went on to good use in the NFL. I do like the digital first down line. It makes the other sports look like cheap video games and obstructs the view. However, the first down line was done well and is non-intrusive for the viewer.
will will increase to more than 115,000 petabytes by 2019, compared to under 30,000 petabytes this year, representing almost a four-fold increase
10 terabytes would hold all the information stored in the Library of Congress. A single petabyte is a hundred times that. Perspective
Um, that's because the vast majority of the Library of Congress is text information. I'm pretty sure that their collection of cat videos is severely lacking... (grin)
You're enabling awful business practices by publishers to push shit out the door.
The only two games I'm seriously looking forward to are Metal Gear Solid V The Phantom Pain and Street Fighter V.
Both of which I'm guessing won't have these problems. I don't know why Japanese devs aren't having these problems but western ones are.
I'm looking forward to Fallout 4 and Uncharted A Thief's End.
I've enjoyed the Fallout series plus this one is set in Boston, the area where I live. Pre-ordering is the only way that you can get special editions (i.e. the Pip-Boy edition being released this week). That being said, the Fallout games tend to have a lot of bugs on first release. Whether this is related to pre-ordering or not is still up in the air. I agree that there is likely more business pressure to release a game on time, no matter what condition, if you have customers that have already paid for the product. But I'm not sure that other business pressures wouldn't cause the same result (i.e. pressure from marketing, sales, etc.).
Uncharted has been delayed to spring 2016 to continue polishing the game. Part of this was also to more closely tie in to the movie version which was scheduled for release in June 2016. However, it's an example of a game studio delaying a game to get it right. The movie version, for those interested, just lost it's director and actor so it's unlikely that the movie will be released in 2016.
Whether pre-ordering causes games to be released before they are ready or not, it's not going away. Why? For social reasons. People who pre-order want the game first for social status, so that they can play the game first, brag to their friends, and to get the limited edition versions. You can see a similar dynamic when it comes to new Apple products. Value wise, it makes sense to wait, but for some people that rush of being the first and the center of attention, even if short lived, is worth it.
That would be incorrect. I've bought 13 of those drives. So far, 9 of them are dead. None of them bought through newegg.
Funny, I've bought about 6x 7200 RPM Seagate 3TB drives and they are still spinning just fine, not one failure.
Either I have been extremely lucky or something else is going on for you to have such a high failure rate. i.e. supplier not handling them correctly, computer doesn't have a clean power source (mine is on UPS), etc.
Most of the problems with these drives were reported by people who bought them from Newegg. Newegg, at the time, were shipping them bare and loose in boxes with no padding. Since then, Newegg has changed their shipping practices and drive failures dropped off to more normal levels.
Plus, Blackblaze was running the cheapest Seagate drives that they could buy, which tended to be the low end external enclosure drives. They would remove them from the enclosures and add them to a disk array. Who knows how well those were handled or packaged. They would then be running 24x7x365.
The drives from other Manufacturers tended to be the higher end NAS drives, built for 24x7x365 usage.
The Blackblaze analysis was interesting and gave them insight into how well their strategy of using low-end SATA consumer hard-drives was working for them in their data center. However, applying it as a benchmark for home use is a failure to understand the difference in use case.
True. But then again, is there such a thing as a convenient hard drive failure?
What about when you plan on destroying the drive anyway... (grin)
There are, however, some hard drive failures that would be considered relatively painless because you either simply replace the drive (i.e. RAID-5 array) or you replace the drive and successfully restore everything.
I don't think the OP is suggesting gmail is going anywhere soon. I think he is suggesting that they may not be round in the (not soon) future.
There was a time when AOL wasn't going anywhere anytime soon. Maybe they still aren't, but that claim is straining credulity. At the very least, being stuck with an AOL email address in 2015 is not an ideal situation to be in. Is it really so hard to imagine that one might not want to be stuck with a gmail email address in 2035?
I pay for my own domain and external hosting. It has Spam Assassin on it and gets about 40% of the spam. I have GMail configured to pull in my email from that account. GMail's spam filter gets the other 59% of spam. I set up Gmail to send as my personal email address instead of my gmail address. This way I have my own domain and I get to take advantage of Gmail's spam filter.
The one thing that sucks about the set-up is that Gmail has a randomized timer that polls external accounts based on some algorithm and it can sometimes take 30 minutes for email to show up. To get around this I set up both accounts on most of my devices so that I can check my email server if the message isn't in Gmail.
After all, 42 is the answer to life, the universe, and everything. I'm pretty sure that divide by zero falls under the "everything" category.... (grin)
A couple years ago I decided to give up refined sugar in general for a few months, particularly soda (like any good dev, I consumed more than my share of the stuff). After 3 months without, I drank a Dr. Pepper (my favorite) and it was disgusting. Tasted like a mouthful of sugar. Amazing how much you become desensitized to sugar, and the same holds for salt.
The real surprise was one day when I discovered that carrots are actually sweet. They just don't seem that way when you consume a metric ton of refined sugar every week. That really made me start wondering just how badly my perception of foods had been corrupted over the years.
Yes carrots are sweet, especially right from the garden. The carrots that most grocery stores have are pretty much crap. You want to know what else is sweet raw and right from the ground, potatoes. You wouldn't think so, but they are.
In the age of cheap body fat % measuring devices, why not make body fat % the standard? I'm tall and borderline overweight according to BMI, but I have about 14% body fat percentage. It's much easier to compare across body types with that metric than BMI. Yet I've never had a doctor record my body fat %, only height and weight.
Except for one problem, a recent study (highlighted on 60 minutes) found that older people live longer if they have a bit of extra body fat. One of the reasons posited by the researchers was that their systems have extra energy stores to get them through being sick, etc.
Because there are also OCP network equipments, like a switch design from Facebook that lets you do software defined networks easily.
What's interesting is that the networking piece includes open sourcing the ASIC firmware. ASICs improve network performance by implementing hardware switching, routing, etc.
I forgot to add that one of my goals for this system was to make it as quiet as possible while still using air cooling. I can barely hear it running when sitting next to it. Of course, the GTX 970 sounds like an airplane taking off, in comparison, when it gets warm while gaming. Then again, I'm usually too distracted to notice... (grin)
- CORSAIR HX Series HX850 is really quiet - Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO - CPU Cooler with 120mm PWM Fan (RR-212E-20PK-R2) - 50PCS Flexible Silikon Anti Vibration Mount Screw Pins Rivet For PC Case Fans from ebay to replace case fan screws - COUGAR CF-V12HB Vortex Hydro-Dynamic-Bearing (Fluid) 300,000 Hours 12CM Silent Cooling Fan (Black) for in front and behind the drive bays - XIGMATEK eXTREME SILENT Series XSF-F1252 120mm Case Fan
Dell has a nice new bezel-less U2415 that is IPS and 16:10 at 1440p. You can find it less than $300 at some sites.
Thanks!! I do prefer the 16:10 format. Going to a 16:9 monitor would require going up to a 27".
Acer just came out with their 27" 144Hz IPS G-SYNC 16:9 monitors at CES. Much more expensive, but may be a better monitor covering both color gamut and video gaming.
My current computer was built in Dec 2012, with some updates since (i.e. video card). I'm usually on a 3 year refresh rate. I'm thinking that I'll be building my next one when Skylake comes out.
I use mine for photo editing, video editing, gaming, GNS3 (Network simulation), etc. It was built primarily for gaming with the thought that anything else thrown at it would work just fine. The weak point in my system are the displays, its past time for new monitors. For gaming I use my 52" Samsung Plasma but I plan on moving to a 3 monitor setup, which is why I have the 970.
System:
ASUS P8Z77-V PRO LGA 1155 Intel Z77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard
Intel Core i7-3770K Quad-Core Processor 3.5 GHz 8 MB Cache LGA 1155
G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 2133 (PC3 17000)
MSI GTX 970 GAMING 4G GeForce GTX 970 4GB
Sapphire Radeon HD 7950 3GB DDR5 HDMI / DVI-I
Creative Sound Blaster Audigy2 ZS Platinum 7.1 Channels 24-bit 192KHz PCI
2x Samsung 840 Series 250GB SSD (System, Programs)
5x Seagate 2TB 7200RPM SATA III drives (single drives for data, no RAID)
2x SATA drive bay with 2.5" and 3.5" hot swap SATA slots
2x BH14NS40 14x Blu-ray Disc Rewriter
CORSAIR HX Series HX850 850W ATX12V Power Supply
Antec P280 Black ATX Mid Tower Computer Case
You're right and wrong. He wants a system that covers both Earth and Mars, but he also wants to run a satellite internet service. As he said at the Seattle announcement a few weeks ago, we don't know exactly what we'll need to build a city on Mars, "But one thing's for sure, it'll take a whole lot of money." So he intends to use the ISP satellite network to fund the overall Mars mission.
You know, I have one simple request. And that is to have satellites with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads!!!
It's worth noting that this video is only 8k resolution, but it's not what the eventual 8k broadcast standard will be. That requires a higher frame rate and higher colour depth as well. Same with 4k, it's more than just a resolution bump and most cheap 4k equipment is only HD with more resolution.
Not only that, but the majority of the content is upscaled from 6K (whether using upscaling or stitching). It's cool and all that he spent the time and effort to do this, but, in my opinion, it's not true 8K until it's native video. Red has a 6K camera that can be upgraded with an 8K sensor.
Work with your exchange admin to give your replacement permissions to your inbox. They can then open it as a second mailbox. Make sure that you delete any personal stuff first.
Another option is to have your Exchange admin create a public folder and only give permissions to you and your replacement. You can then move the email into the public folder and have shared access until you leave.
Those are the only two methods that I can think of where the information would not leave the Exchange system. Typically, this is done by exporting email from the old mailbox and importing it into the new using a PST file, but the email is temporarily outside of the system during this process.
I don't think people quite understand the issue. It's not sick time. I'm one of only 2-3 neurosurgeons in a the hospital at a given time and there is so much critical work that we're all needed there at once. To have someone cover me would be problematic since they are already working 80-100 hours per week already, so they would go over the policy limits for work hours, or at the very least be very very unhappy about it.
So, because of bad management practices you would rather work yourself to death and put others in jeopardy health wise? How do you take vacations? What happens if you get hit by a bus?
If you and your peers are consistently working 80 to 100 hours a week then you guys are just plain crazy. All of you will be burned out within 2 years and end up with your own health problems. There is obviously enough work to hire more employees. If management is saying that they can't find talent, then they are probably not trying hard enough. At the very least, I'm sure that there are young talented doctors out there that you could train and mentor.
There's your problem right there. If you're sick, you're sick. You already feel bad, so beating yourself up for staying home is just giving in to this ridiculous work ethic. And that work ethic? It's nothing but crude mind control. We're told that we're supposed to have a special "ethic" that means if you're not suffering, you're not earning your pay. And if your job requires you to get a doctor's excuse to take a day off work, you need to give notice tomorrow and find another job.
The corporatists have done a number on your head. Resist it.
If I'm sick, I stay home. No sense in passing what I have to the rest of my coworkers. The reality is that it's actually best for the company if I do. Which would they rather happen, one worker stays home for a couple of days to recover or that person goes to work and they lose productivity from 10 others that then get sick...
This finding goes to show that even smart people are stupid even about the most basic things and that familiarity breeds contempt. I wonder how much of this has to do with the Doctors being around sick patients all of the time and getting complacent. The worse part is that they could compromise someone whose immune system is already weak from another disease.
A Doctor should know better......
Hold it when corporations merge with government it's fascism
When government merges with corporations it's socialism
Good to have that cleared up, I have never been clear on the difference.
Think of it as right-totalitarianism vs. left-totalitarianism. One's mostly concerned with your bedroom activities, and the other's concerned about your bankbook. The problem is your bankbook can impact your bedroom activities, or vice versa, so eventually fascism/socialism have to regulate those activities as well. Hence the cause for your confusion. The difference is probably more easily explained using cows.
I thought that the standard was to use pigs...
i'm 41. and people who meet me for the first time think i'm in my mid 20's. same with my wife. don't drink more than once or twice a month, exercise, avoid eating out all the time and avoid processed foods. stay away from milk, sugar and gluten. cook for yourself and don't buy the prepared foods
I drank milk all the time as a kid and still do (1% now). I also look to be 10 to 15 years younger than my age.
Giving up anything (sugar, meat, milk, gluten) can have a placebo effect. You feel better because you are taking control, exercising more, etc.
There are people who legitimately have various levels of sensitivity towards certain foods (peanuts is one of the more common). There are also people who eat too much which can cause problems such as Diabetes, becoming overweight, not having energy, etc. I agree that for these people, a special diet may be needed for them to be healthy.
I look younger than my chronological age and my diet consists of a bit of everything, including milk, veggies, meat, bread, processed foods, and my sweet tooth for chocolate.
Being active and all things in moderation is my motto....
Just out of curiosity, what do you think the proper homonym phrase is for this?
From grammarist.com it should be "free rein" as in a horse being able to do what they want because the reins are free. "reign" is a recent misspelling that is being used more often.
... for the glowing hockey puck.... and the glowing golf ball (US Open).... Both of which are/were stupid ideas.... No... not hockey and golf.... the glowy part...
At least the technology went on to good use in the NFL. I do like the digital first down line. It makes the other sports look like cheap video games and obstructs the view. However, the first down line was done well and is non-intrusive for the viewer.
will will increase to more than 115,000 petabytes by 2019, compared to under 30,000 petabytes this year, representing almost a four-fold increase
10 terabytes would hold all the information stored in the Library of Congress. A single petabyte is a hundred times that.
Perspective
Um, that's because the vast majority of the Library of Congress is text information. I'm pretty sure that their collection of cat videos is severely lacking... (grin)
Browndo has electrolytes...
You're enabling awful business practices by publishers to push shit out the door.
The only two games I'm seriously looking forward to are Metal Gear Solid V The Phantom Pain and Street Fighter V.
Both of which I'm guessing won't have these problems. I don't know why Japanese devs aren't having these problems but western ones are.
I'm looking forward to Fallout 4 and Uncharted A Thief's End.
I've enjoyed the Fallout series plus this one is set in Boston, the area where I live. Pre-ordering is the only way that you can get special editions (i.e. the Pip-Boy edition being released this week). That being said, the Fallout games tend to have a lot of bugs on first release. Whether this is related to pre-ordering or not is still up in the air. I agree that there is likely more business pressure to release a game on time, no matter what condition, if you have customers that have already paid for the product. But I'm not sure that other business pressures wouldn't cause the same result (i.e. pressure from marketing, sales, etc.).
Uncharted has been delayed to spring 2016 to continue polishing the game. Part of this was also to more closely tie in to the movie version which was scheduled for release in June 2016. However, it's an example of a game studio delaying a game to get it right. The movie version, for those interested, just lost it's director and actor so it's unlikely that the movie will be released in 2016.
Whether pre-ordering causes games to be released before they are ready or not, it's not going away. Why? For social reasons. People who pre-order want the game first for social status, so that they can play the game first, brag to their friends, and to get the limited edition versions. You can see a similar dynamic when it comes to new Apple products. Value wise, it makes sense to wait, but for some people that rush of being the first and the center of attention, even if short lived, is worth it.
That would be incorrect. I've bought 13 of those drives. So far, 9 of them are dead. None of them bought through newegg.
Funny, I've bought about 6x 7200 RPM Seagate 3TB drives and they are still spinning just fine, not one failure.
Either I have been extremely lucky or something else is going on for you to have such a high failure rate. i.e. supplier not handling them correctly, computer doesn't have a clean power source (mine is on UPS), etc.
Most of the problems with these drives were reported by people who bought them from Newegg. Newegg, at the time, were shipping them bare and loose in boxes with no padding. Since then, Newegg has changed their shipping practices and drive failures dropped off to more normal levels.
Plus, Blackblaze was running the cheapest Seagate drives that they could buy, which tended to be the low end external enclosure drives. They would remove them from the enclosures and add them to a disk array. Who knows how well those were handled or packaged. They would then be running 24x7x365.
The drives from other Manufacturers tended to be the higher end NAS drives, built for 24x7x365 usage.
The Blackblaze analysis was interesting and gave them insight into how well their strategy of using low-end SATA consumer hard-drives was working for them in their data center. However, applying it as a benchmark for home use is a failure to understand the difference in use case.
True. But then again, is there such a thing as a convenient hard drive failure?
What about when you plan on destroying the drive anyway... (grin)
There are, however, some hard drive failures that would be considered relatively painless because you either simply replace the drive (i.e. RAID-5 array) or you replace the drive and successfully restore everything.
I don't think the OP is suggesting gmail is going anywhere soon. I think he is suggesting that they may not be round in the (not soon) future.
There was a time when AOL wasn't going anywhere anytime soon. Maybe they still aren't, but that claim is straining credulity. At the very least, being stuck with an AOL email address in 2015 is not an ideal situation to be in. Is it really so hard to imagine that one might not want to be stuck with a gmail email address in 2035?
I pay for my own domain and external hosting. It has Spam Assassin on it and gets about 40% of the spam. I have GMail configured to pull in my email from that account. GMail's spam filter gets the other 59% of spam. I set up Gmail to send as my personal email address instead of my gmail address. This way I have my own domain and I get to take advantage of Gmail's spam filter.
The one thing that sucks about the set-up is that Gmail has a randomized timer that polls external accounts based on some algorithm and it can sometimes take 30 minutes for email to show up. To get around this I set up both accounts on most of my devices so that I can check my email server if the message isn't in Gmail.
After all, 42 is the answer to life, the universe, and everything. I'm pretty sure that divide by zero falls under the "everything" category.... (grin)
A couple years ago I decided to give up refined sugar in general for a few months, particularly soda (like any good dev, I consumed more than my share of the stuff). After 3 months without, I drank a Dr. Pepper (my favorite) and it was disgusting. Tasted like a mouthful of sugar. Amazing how much you become desensitized to sugar, and the same holds for salt.
The real surprise was one day when I discovered that carrots are actually sweet. They just don't seem that way when you consume a metric ton of refined sugar every week. That really made me start wondering just how badly my perception of foods had been corrupted over the years.
Yes carrots are sweet, especially right from the garden. The carrots that most grocery stores have are pretty much crap. You want to know what else is sweet raw and right from the ground, potatoes. You wouldn't think so, but they are.
In the age of cheap body fat % measuring devices, why not make body fat % the standard? I'm tall and borderline overweight according to BMI, but I have about 14% body fat percentage. It's much easier to compare across body types with that metric than BMI. Yet I've never had a doctor record my body fat %, only height and weight.
Except for one problem, a recent study (highlighted on 60 minutes) found that older people live longer if they have a bit of extra body fat. One of the reasons posited by the researchers was that their systems have extra energy stores to get them through being sick, etc.
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/wa...
Colleges are stating to create drone piloting programs. There is going to be a huge demand for them over the next 5 to 10 years.
Because there are also OCP network equipments, like a switch design from Facebook that lets you do software defined networks easily.
What's interesting is that the networking piece includes open sourcing the ASIC firmware. ASICs improve network performance by implementing hardware switching, routing, etc.
I forgot to add that one of my goals for this system was to make it as quiet as possible while still using air cooling. I can barely hear it running when sitting next to it. Of course, the GTX 970 sounds like an airplane taking off, in comparison, when it gets warm while gaming. Then again, I'm usually too distracted to notice... (grin)
- CORSAIR HX Series HX850 is really quiet
- Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO - CPU Cooler with 120mm PWM Fan (RR-212E-20PK-R2)
- 50PCS Flexible Silikon Anti Vibration Mount Screw Pins Rivet For PC Case Fans from ebay to replace case fan screws
- COUGAR CF-V12HB Vortex Hydro-Dynamic-Bearing (Fluid) 300,000 Hours 12CM Silent Cooling Fan (Black) for in front and behind the drive bays
- XIGMATEK eXTREME SILENT Series XSF-F1252 120mm Case Fan
Dell has a nice new bezel-less U2415 that is IPS and 16:10 at 1440p. You can find it less than $300 at some sites.
Thanks!! I do prefer the 16:10 format. Going to a 16:9 monitor would require going up to a 27".
Acer just came out with their 27" 144Hz IPS G-SYNC 16:9 monitors at CES. Much more expensive, but may be a better monitor covering both color gamut and video gaming.
My current computer was built in Dec 2012, with some updates since (i.e. video card). I'm usually on a 3 year refresh rate. I'm thinking that I'll be building my next one when Skylake comes out.
I use mine for photo editing, video editing, gaming, GNS3 (Network simulation), etc. It was built primarily for gaming with the thought that anything else thrown at it would work just fine. The weak point in my system are the displays, its past time for new monitors. For gaming I use my 52" Samsung Plasma but I plan on moving to a 3 monitor setup, which is why I have the 970.
System:
ASUS P8Z77-V PRO LGA 1155 Intel Z77 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Intel Motherboard
Intel Core i7-3770K Quad-Core Processor 3.5 GHz 8 MB Cache LGA 1155
G.SKILL Ripjaws Z Series 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 2133 (PC3 17000)
MSI GTX 970 GAMING 4G GeForce GTX 970 4GB
Sapphire Radeon HD 7950 3GB DDR5 HDMI / DVI-I
Creative Sound Blaster Audigy2 ZS Platinum 7.1 Channels 24-bit 192KHz PCI
2x Samsung 840 Series 250GB SSD (System, Programs)
5x Seagate 2TB 7200RPM SATA III drives (single drives for data, no RAID)
2x SATA drive bay with 2.5" and 3.5" hot swap SATA slots
2x BH14NS40 14x Blu-ray Disc Rewriter
CORSAIR HX Series HX850 850W ATX12V Power Supply
Antec P280 Black ATX Mid Tower Computer Case
Displays:
Dell 2405FPW 24" 16:10 monitor
Acer 24" 16:9 monitor
You're right and wrong. He wants a system that covers both Earth and Mars, but he also wants to run a satellite internet service. As he said at the Seattle announcement a few weeks ago, we don't know exactly what we'll need to build a city on Mars, "But one thing's for sure, it'll take a whole lot of money." So he intends to use the ISP satellite network to fund the overall Mars mission.
You know, I have one simple request. And that is to have satellites with frickin' laser beams attached to their heads!!!
If Space-X can't win on merits alone, lasers....
It's worth noting that this video is only 8k resolution, but it's not what the eventual 8k broadcast standard will be. That requires a higher frame rate and higher colour depth as well. Same with 4k, it's more than just a resolution bump and most cheap 4k equipment is only HD with more resolution.
Not only that, but the majority of the content is upscaled from 6K (whether using upscaling or stitching). It's cool and all that he spent the time and effort to do this, but, in my opinion, it's not true 8K until it's native video. Red has a 6K camera that can be upgraded with an 8K sensor.
Work with your exchange admin to give your replacement permissions to your inbox. They can then open it as a second mailbox. Make sure that you delete any personal stuff first.
Another option is to have your Exchange admin create a public folder and only give permissions to you and your replacement. You can then move the email into the public folder and have shared access until you leave.
Those are the only two methods that I can think of where the information would not leave the Exchange system. Typically, this is done by exporting email from the old mailbox and importing it into the new using a PST file, but the email is temporarily outside of the system during this process.