And there's lots of evidence that any more than moderate amounts of meat are pretty bad for you
Certainly true, but there's also evidence that you don't necessarily want to avoid animal fat and eat mostly lean meat. Of course, then you have to be careful to eat even less meat.
The display doesn't have a variable clock for drawing it. Coping with the input isn't the same thing as seamless and smooth display.
Depending on your graphics card, I've seen computers that show nothing on the screen until Windows finishes booting. I think some graphics cards tweak the output down to 60Hz to make it easier on the screens.
No. At least not most of the time. This is the real reason that 120Hz displays are good. Divisible by both 24 and 30 - the screen can repeat frames equally to get to 120Hz and not have the jitter (however mild) of 3:2 pulldown for movies.
Once they had made it harder for CentOS to repackage RHEL, they probably realized that CentOS being out of date would reflect badly on them and make RHEL appear out of date by extension (by the people who haven't bought a license yet).
Right - there's no easy way out of the cut if you have monthly fees. Unless you put no reference to a subscription in the app itself. If the only way to subscribe is to go to a web site and figure out that address without referencing the app, I think you can get by without allowing an in-app purchase.
So the easiest option is to build the monthly fee into the cost of the hardware and give it a limited life span.
I'd say it's the same as any electronic medical device. It's not even an AI in a small sense. It's following predefined rules. If the person who prescribed it was aware of issues (or should have been aware) before prescribing it, then they'd share some liability. Otherwise, the liability is with the maker of the product. Not really any different than trusting a cheap electronic glucose meter.
Hmm...the app is free, but it only works with the prescribed device? Just like most other services that require a device. Then again, if it has monthly fees, Apple wants 30% from any in-app purchase. So it's probably a one-time purchase. But then the device probably "expires" after x years and has to be repurchased.
I think psychosis is a physiological human conscious response to electro-magnetic solar phenomenon. The craziest thing, is that there's already evidence that this theory might have legs [nih.gov].
It's like trying to download a much more advanced quantum consciousness into a limited RAM, standard binary human brain.
You seem to be implying that the sun is intelligent and is broadcasting its intelligence across radio frequencies, attempting to infect new hosts. Strange theory.
I wouldn't deny that it's possible that some people are sensitive to EM and that perhaps they have a brain structure that acts as an antenna, receiving noise but in trying to make sense of it, perceiving it as intelligent input.
This would have nothing to do with ancient worship. They simply believed (accurately) that the sun is the source of all life on this planet, and therefore thought that this made the sun an intelligent being.
ate mostly grasses and bark
We have a single stomach and can't really process cellulose. If our ancestors could, that's not really relevant.
And there's lots of evidence that any more than moderate amounts of meat are pretty bad for you
Certainly true, but there's also evidence that you don't necessarily want to avoid animal fat and eat mostly lean meat. Of course, then you have to be careful to eat even less meat.
Have you ever tried to convince your hunted prey to stay on a track?
The display doesn't have a variable clock for drawing it. Coping with the input isn't the same thing as seamless and smooth display.
Depending on your graphics card, I've seen computers that show nothing on the screen until Windows finishes booting. I think some graphics cards tweak the output down to 60Hz to make it easier on the screens.
No. At least not most of the time. This is the real reason that 120Hz displays are good. Divisible by both 24 and 30 - the screen can repeat frames equally to get to 120Hz and not have the jitter (however mild) of 3:2 pulldown for movies.
Sure- I know I wouldn't do much work for $10k/yr. For $100K, I'm willing to do a lot more.
Head up to Venezuela for a better deal:
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/weird-news/venezuelan-government-sends-troops-electronics-2718204
Somewhere around the ankles. There comes a point when satire is so realistic, the difference hardly matters.
It is secure against manipulation
Did you even read the headline or summary?
Maybe they got some help from Veridian Dynamics - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJ1TaYwU394
30 times per second. This works with live video.
Once they had made it harder for CentOS to repackage RHEL, they probably realized that CentOS being out of date would reflect badly on them and make RHEL appear out of date by extension (by the people who haven't bought a license yet).
Asimov says that all robots should be programmed to follow these three laws, not that they all do by nature.
Not a good idea to use a 16-bit register to identify humans. There's about 7 billion of us and there's too much chance for an overflow of blood.
Well we certainly couldn't program these things with the three laws.
Don't have that imprinted on a red t-shirt. Robots won't know what to do with you.
That's 36*10*10, including digits as his does.
So go ahead and store an ISO or physical disc of a distro that does. And the specs of the hardware that would have to be emulated to run it.
I update all of my system passwords
And this is why employers should have SSO.
Right - there's no easy way out of the cut if you have monthly fees. Unless you put no reference to a subscription in the app itself. If the only way to subscribe is to go to a web site and figure out that address without referencing the app, I think you can get by without allowing an in-app purchase.
So the easiest option is to build the monthly fee into the cost of the hardware and give it a limited life span.
The same sort that would make up the word automatization instead of just saying automation.
I'd say it's the same as any electronic medical device. It's not even an AI in a small sense. It's following predefined rules. If the person who prescribed it was aware of issues (or should have been aware) before prescribing it, then they'd share some liability. Otherwise, the liability is with the maker of the product. Not really any different than trusting a cheap electronic glucose meter.
Hmm...the app is free, but it only works with the prescribed device? Just like most other services that require a device. Then again, if it has monthly fees, Apple wants 30% from any in-app purchase. So it's probably a one-time purchase. But then the device probably "expires" after x years and has to be repurchased.
But those same people probably also don't know how to manage their money and certainly have a smart phone.
I think psychosis is a physiological human conscious response to electro-magnetic solar phenomenon. The craziest thing, is that there's already evidence that this theory might have legs [nih.gov].
It's like trying to download a much more advanced quantum consciousness into a limited RAM, standard binary human brain.
You seem to be implying that the sun is intelligent and is broadcasting its intelligence across radio frequencies, attempting to infect new hosts. Strange theory.
I wouldn't deny that it's possible that some people are sensitive to EM and that perhaps they have a brain structure that acts as an antenna, receiving noise but in trying to make sense of it, perceiving it as intelligent input.
This would have nothing to do with ancient worship. They simply believed (accurately) that the sun is the source of all life on this planet, and therefore thought that this made the sun an intelligent being.