At the time of purchase, AMD's 8-core processor cost more than Intels 4-core w/ HT, so Intel was the better deal for me. Also Intel performs better with virtualization and that was one of the selling points for me. I think the energy usage was lower as well for Intel.
I have a dual proc quad core AMD at work though and it does its function fine there.
Regarding the English link. Is that something that people have to do at a pawn shop? (all customer bio records go to the sheriff's station?) I wouldn't think that would be legal.
But honest customer already bought the game. Only no more profit if they equate Capcom with crippling DRM and refuse to buy more games. We'll see how good their memory is by the time the next game comes out.
You could also duplicate items by giving them to another character, removing that character and saving it as a different file. Pools of Darkness had a bug in one room where the treasure would always respawn (and the experience wasn't bad). I used this to level & multiclass my humans (39/40) as well as be rich with gems.
Even with all this cheating, beating the boss was tough for me (I suck at games).
It doesn't even need to be shopped. You can mark your emails important/unimportant by yourself to make it look like that, just like you can read an email and then mark it as unread. But if someone creates a new gmail account and signs up for all those services, I wouldn't be surprised if the google emails come up as prioritized (since they are from a trusted source). There isn't a way through groupon to really confirm that someone signed up for those emails (you can put in anyones email address and fill it with spam). It just takes a couple markings of groupon as important and gmail as unimportant and after that it will remember what is important.
And you pull out your phone and find out it doesn't have reception because you are out in the boondocks and AT&T/Verizon/other carrier don't give a rat's ass about getting reception there.
There are small low-power PCs like fitpc that use very small amount of energy. I don't use mine as a router, but it runs 24/7 and is quite energy efficient (I get to turn off the desktop at night, but still have a personal webpage).
I had that kind of watch way back when they were introduced (around '91 [citation needed]). Was nice, but couldn't survive the shock when it went smashing into the ground. g-shock is better and now I have a casio dw6900.
Ditto. Especially saying that I remove the cover as soon as I get it so I don't tear it while thrashing (reading) the book. And judging by all the mistakes I see in the current books, they must be pieces of trash before the editing, or the editors are living in some alternate universe where wrong is right.
DISCLAIMER: This comment was not edited by an editor. Read at your discretion.
Re:And just as important.
on
Happy Pi Day
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· Score: 1
Actually, it is White Day in Japan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Day), which happens 1 month after V-day.
I hate to reply to my own post, but I forgot to add that I think redefining noon to be anything other than when the sun is at its highest point in the sky is tantamount to redefining pi to be 4 just because 4 is an easier number to work with.
Well, in that case noon shouldn't be 12:00pm, because where timezones are located doesn't guarantee that every place in that timezone would have the sun at its highest point at 12:00pm.
I agree. That is probably what I would have done in the same situation. Of course the speed of how fast he went through all the sites might have been a little too quick for me. Then again, I'm in no rush to make a FaceMash site.
I've downloaded it way more than that. Maybe because it was small and easy to find, I didn't keep it on my 'downloads/software' drive, like bigger shareware. I also downloaded it on friend's computers so we could chat. I don't know anyone that paid for it. A bit of nagging when starting isn't enough for me to get out my checkbook, envelope, stamp, etc (I didn't have a CC 15 years ago).
An hour or two? Why stop there? If you're going to all this trouble to complete exaggerate the rate at which the batteries age, why stop at a couple hours? Why not go with 15 minutes? 10 minutes?
Hey, you described my MBP that I'm using. In slightly over a year (past warranty), the battery life quickly degraded down to 30 minutes, then 15 minutes. Now if I unplug it, I have about 5 seconds until it shuts itself off (scary with the magsafe connector). My 5 year old Dell laptop can still go 2 hours (starting from 3 hours) in a charge.
But my iPad (at 9-months) is still holding a good charge. The only time I use it for a long period would be on weekends and I don't imagine it dropping down to 2 hours any time soon.
More than speaking to a computer, I'd rather have it see what I'm looking at and read my mind if it should open an app or click on a button. I could get a touch screen to minimize the overhead of moving a mouse across the screen, but there is still an overhead of moving my arm to touch the screen.
As far as typing, I don't mind doing it. I am also hoping our next generation will not having a problem typing relatively fast that voice-to-text doesn't offer any large benefit. Also pointed out below is noise pollution, which would always be a problem with voice-to-text systems. It seems like I also need to talk louder than normal to have it clearly type what I am saying.
The program would generate a profile pathname like this:/users/cwe/profiles/../../../etc/passwd
When the file is opened, the operating system resolves the "../" during path canonicalization and actually accesses this file:/etc/passwd
As a result, the attacker could read the entire text of the password file.
Big fucking deal of the attacker reading the passwd file. On my machine, it is 644 and I'm pretty sure it needs to be readable to function. Maybe if they wrote shadow file, I'd give them more credit.
At the time of purchase, AMD's 8-core processor cost more than Intels 4-core w/ HT, so Intel was the better deal for me. Also Intel performs better with virtualization and that was one of the selling points for me.
I think the energy usage was lower as well for Intel.
I have a dual proc quad core AMD at work though and it does its function fine there.
Regarding the English link. Is that something that people have to do at a pawn shop? (all customer bio records go to the sheriff's station?)
I wouldn't think that would be legal.
But honest customer already bought the game.
Only no more profit if they equate Capcom with crippling DRM and refuse to buy more games. We'll see how good their memory is by the time the next game comes out.
You could also duplicate items by giving them to another character, removing that character and saving it as a different file.
Pools of Darkness had a bug in one room where the treasure would always respawn (and the experience wasn't bad). I used this to level & multiclass my humans (39/40) as well as be rich with gems.
Even with all this cheating, beating the boss was tough for me (I suck at games).
It doesn't even need to be shopped. You can mark your emails important/unimportant by yourself to make it look like that, just like you can read an email and then mark it as unread.
But if someone creates a new gmail account and signs up for all those services, I wouldn't be surprised if the google emails come up as prioritized (since they are from a trusted source). There isn't a way through groupon to really confirm that someone signed up for those emails (you can put in anyones email address and fill it with spam).
It just takes a couple markings of groupon as important and gmail as unimportant and after that it will remember what is important.
And you pull out your phone and find out it doesn't have reception because you are out in the boondocks and AT&T/Verizon/other carrier don't give a rat's ass about getting reception there.
They hack my computer and fix it? Sweet.
I'd think they'd rather hack it and download all my doc & images before fixing a webcam.
There are small low-power PCs like fitpc that use very small amount of energy.
I don't use mine as a router, but it runs 24/7 and is quite energy efficient (I get to turn off the desktop at night, but still have a personal webpage).
I had that kind of watch way back when they were introduced (around '91 [citation needed]).
Was nice, but couldn't survive the shock when it went smashing into the ground. g-shock is better and now I have a casio dw6900.
Since when was http://http//www.digitaldueprocess.org/ a valid link?
Agreed, which is how it is in Japanese (and maybe other places, like Mandarin Chinese from above).
The data is old, but according to forbes charities
American Red Cross operates at 91% efficiency.
And this site: http://www.charitynavigator.org/index.cfm?bay=search.summary&orgid=3277
Puts it at almost 92%.
Of course that doesn't mean they don't pay their CEO a lot. It says he makes $446k a year.
Repost: http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1486910&cid=30523092
(And yes, I read it the first time)
Ditto. Especially saying that I remove the cover as soon as I get it so I don't tear it while thrashing (reading) the book.
And judging by all the mistakes I see in the current books, they must be pieces of trash before the editing, or the editors are living in some alternate universe where wrong is right.
DISCLAIMER: This comment was not edited by an editor. Read at your discretion.
Actually, it is White Day in Japan (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_Day), which happens 1 month after V-day.
I hate to reply to my own post, but I forgot to add that I think redefining noon to be anything other than when the sun is at its highest point in the sky is tantamount to redefining pi to be 4 just because 4 is an easier number to work with.
Well, in that case noon shouldn't be 12:00pm, because where timezones are located doesn't guarantee that every place in that timezone would have the sun at its highest point at 12:00pm.
I agree.
That is probably what I would have done in the same situation. Of course the speed of how fast he went through all the sites might have been a little too quick for me. Then again, I'm in no rush to make a FaceMash site.
Win95 (the movie came out in 1996)
I've downloaded it way more than that. Maybe because it was small and easy to find, I didn't keep it on my 'downloads/software' drive, like bigger shareware. I also downloaded it on friend's computers so we could chat.
I don't know anyone that paid for it. A bit of nagging when starting isn't enough for me to get out my checkbook, envelope, stamp, etc (I didn't have a CC 15 years ago).
An hour or two? Why stop there? If you're going to all this trouble to complete exaggerate the rate at which the batteries age, why stop at a couple hours? Why not go with 15 minutes? 10 minutes?
Hey, you described my MBP that I'm using. In slightly over a year (past warranty), the battery life quickly degraded down to 30 minutes, then 15 minutes. Now if I unplug it, I have about 5 seconds until it shuts itself off (scary with the magsafe connector).
My 5 year old Dell laptop can still go 2 hours (starting from 3 hours) in a charge.
But my iPad (at 9-months) is still holding a good charge. The only time I use it for a long period would be on weekends and I don't imagine it dropping down to 2 hours any time soon.
More than speaking to a computer, I'd rather have it see what I'm looking at and read my mind if it should open an app or click on a button.
I could get a touch screen to minimize the overhead of moving a mouse across the screen, but there is still an overhead of moving my arm to touch the screen.
As far as typing, I don't mind doing it. I am also hoping our next generation will not having a problem typing relatively fast that voice-to-text doesn't offer any large benefit.
Also pointed out below is noise pollution, which would always be a problem with voice-to-text systems. It seems like I also need to talk louder than normal to have it clearly type what I am saying.
...Your phone could make coffee...
This reminds me of the Pomegranate phone.
I'd like to know how many AMBER alerts have been issued during the timeframe where 525 children were safely recovered.
800k children reported missing a year means 1.5 children every second, which would generate quite a bit of spam on FB if they were updated there.
I'm sure he is going after the least-controversial low-hanging fruit.
I'm kind of surprised of the large reaction.
Looking at http://cwe.mitre.org/data/definitions/22.html#Related_Attack_Patterns, I wonder who generated their examples:
The program would generate a profile pathname like this: /users/cwe/profiles/../../../etc/passwd
When the file is opened, the operating system resolves the "../" during path canonicalization and actually accesses this file: /etc/passwd
As a result, the attacker could read the entire text of the password file.
Big fucking deal of the attacker reading the passwd file. On my machine, it is 644 and I'm pretty sure it needs to be readable to function.
Maybe if they wrote shadow file, I'd give them more credit.