Your government is going to get its revenue increase even if it can't open the borders. So instead of paying $9000 in rent so 20 million immigrants can join the fun, you'll just pay higher taxes.
Why didn't Canadia's government just tax u.s. for the sensor and buy it themselves, instead of having o.u.r. Navy pay them for it? Everyone complains about millions of dollars being spent on engineering in India, but no-one cares about the billions of dollars charged by o.u.r. military to just turn around and buy all that stuff from Canadia.
It really is about competition, not copying
on
Death By DMCA
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· Score: 1
There actually are file sharing appliances in the pipeline. They're just not by the small startups. File sharing is a cornerstone of the Blu-Ray spec. You just won't be able to get it for $40 at Target.
Unlike the past, this time consumers probably won't care. They now pay $7,000,000 for condominiums, so why should they care if their Blu-Ray server is $2000?
These articles don't often mention it, but when companies move out of India it's because Indians are too expensive and Chinese are now the cost winners.
The more tools you get, the more threatened your bosses are going to get. Employees who can host blogs and write killer software are going to get shafted as their tools invade what was once the exclusive domain of their bosses.
The author left out the biggest point: immigration. Silicon Valley has always been the first and last destination for most Asian immigrants. Silicon Valley is the cheapest flight from Asia.
Most of the workers in Silicon Valley were educated in China and India, not Stanford. Their background is engineering all the way because they're not burdened with stupid black studies classes, history of homosexuality, and all the garbage Americans are forced to study. Asians have loads of money to fund businesses because their currency is priceless.
Those 200mm lenses are truly underappreciated masterpieces. They are so over engineered, they can exceed telescopes for most wide field astronomy. Unlike most telescopes of equivalent quality, the EF 200mm is portable.
As time progresses and more people can afford digital SLR's, the EF 200mm F2.8 L II is going to make a lot of astonomical discoveries.
Everyone knows that DVD has enough capacity to store the same content using H.264 as BD using MPEG-2. It's not about the disk capacity or whether it's DVD or BD. It's about the encryption.
It's a tourist attraction. What is 90% of the bay area going to do, drive 50 miles from San Jose to San Francisco to participate in the Google revolution?
The fuel tank is flying without the PAL ramp. The decision was not to continue removing sections other than the PAL ramp. They have to do as little as possible and test each change in a real flight to know what works.
Jim Cramer wrote: > Plus, AMD is a company now run by engineers, whereas it was once run by > salespeople. During this management changeover, the company began to > gain market share. Intel took the opposite route, Cramer said. > > The company was founded by engineers and scientists who > "outmanufactured and outengineered the other guys." Now it is run by a > sales guy, and the company is slipping, he said.
Have a feeling they're right when they say lines like that and they're wrong when Harvard says lines like
> the last thirty years have been dominated by professionals with > strong analytical abilities...the future will depend on individuals > with skills of inventiveness, empathy, joyfulness, and the ability to > find meaning
The trade deficit says engineering produces more value.
Maybe this is the wrong forum to expect high-end consumer electronics to be sold because most of the readers are in college, but this looks like a clearance item that they've desperately asked slashdot to push.
The 24" Dell is regarded as the best of the best, but it's the monitory you'll encounter in your day jobs as soon as you get jobs. You don't want to pay for the same thing at home that you get at your day jobs. You want to pay for something better and that only leaves the 30" Dell.
Only 2 resellers have licenced the 30" panel for US and that's Dell and Apple, but Dell sells it for $300 less. While you can't see the Dell in person without going to Taiwan, you can see the same panel in the Apple store. It has problems with vignetting due to the sharp viewing angle imposed by its size, but it's still very good.
As long as LG restricts its licensees due to the collapsing dollar value, the 30" panels won't go down in price.
So what's the point? Sounds like a textbook article that you can make up yourself just by closing your eyes. "My company's great" "I love my job" "I want to be in upper management."
In typical fashion, the standard of living provided by Microsoft, what he's achieved, and comparisons to other companies are left out.
There's the usual badmouthing of middle management that you can read about in every garbage dumpster. Never a mention of the fact that lots of people write software that influences millions of people. Never a mention of the fact that lots of people write software that gets books written about it. Never a mention that the tools Microsoft provides to allow him to impact 30% of the product are available to anyone with a web browser.
True all images are doctored, but the ESA tends to go overboard with these split views, perspective views, and computer modelled views without ever showing what the original view looked like.
Been using Acuvue 2 all day with agitation when they're in cleaning solution. They dry out indeed, but they're not painful and compared to having an appliance on your face or performing irreversable eye surgery, they're the best solution.
These startup executives seem completely intent on raising publicity by announcing these grand wireless projects but have never made them happen and their location is so far away from the population that they're never used.
San Francisco is a tourist attraction. No-one actually lives there or works there and no-one is going to use a wireless network there. Most of the population lives in the east bay and works in the south bay. That's where a wireless network would be most valuable, but saying you're installing a wireless network in San Ramon just doesn't have the appeal that saying it's in San Francisco has.
The few and far between pictures of what Koreans consider robots show their definition of robot is more like a vending machine or an ATM. If their robot utopia was real, they would be helping u.s. in Iraq.
Every day there's a new "real reason" for DRM. There is one reason which always seems true no matter what the daily fad is. DVD players are $40 because you can download DVD players for free. Blu-Ray players are $1800 because you can't download Blu-Ray players for free.
Read the other slashdot articles and you see what Americans value. "design, ergonomics, real world use rather than artificial spec tests" "relationships with customers" "Sony more trustworthy"
In no headline is a clockspeed or a transisor count or a thermal rating discussed. What Americans want is philosophy and experiences and that's what you should be studying.
This was a very good NOVA documentary. It moved quickly and covered a lot of new ground in a short time, like the algorithms the robots used and the kinds of problems they solved, unlike most documentaries which repackage the same science anecdotes over and over or only discuss philosophy.
It wasn't as much the fact that Stanley won the race as how Stanley won the race and the differing approaches of the builders that made it interesting.
Unfortunately, it was not in HD. It was widescreen low definition. They can get robots to drive 120 miles but they still can't get HD.
They've been trying to push this UPnP/Viiv on us for 4 years now and it's never felt like it's taken off, but maybe it's just taken off for ultra high-end managers in some parallel universe while the flat broke 99% are being left out.
For the 99% of us who don't have offices or mansions, the "Viiv rendere" is going to be an HDMI cable from our studio apartment walk in closets to our discount LG LCD panels. Intel fanboys will rant about HDMI not being long enough. Why don't you come to America and find out what "tiny apartment" really means.
Moses wrote: > Such multi-tasking makes dual-core processors a necessity, which > explains why Intel requires all vendors of Viiv machines to adopt a > dual-core processor before gaining certification.
So all along multitasking was impossible without Intel dual-core processors and Intel never did want our money. Moses is a genious.
But when is ATI going to finish implementing OpenGL 2.0 for Linux? In an interview, their VP's praised their policy of starting over frequently on new code bases, but they're behind NVidia on driver support.
There will be no playback of encrypted movies on the Sony PC. The poster failed to mention that nugget of information, or are we not supposed to bring that up on this site?
Your government is going to get its revenue increase even if it can't open the borders. So instead of paying $9000 in rent so 20 million immigrants can join the fun, you'll just pay higher taxes.
Why didn't Canadia's government just tax u.s. for the sensor and buy it themselves, instead of having o.u.r. Navy pay them for it? Everyone complains about millions of dollars being spent on engineering in India, but no-one cares about the billions of dollars charged by o.u.r. military to just turn around and buy all that stuff from Canadia.
There actually are file sharing appliances in the pipeline. They're just not by the small startups. File sharing is a cornerstone of the Blu-Ray spec. You just won't be able to get it for $40 at Target.
Unlike the past, this time consumers probably won't care. They now pay $7,000,000 for condominiums, so why should they care if their Blu-Ray server is $2000?
These articles don't often mention it, but when companies move out of India it's because Indians are too expensive and Chinese are now the cost winners.
The more tools you get, the more threatened your bosses are going to get. Employees who can host blogs and write killer software are going to get shafted as their tools invade what was once the exclusive domain of their bosses.
The author left out the biggest point: immigration. Silicon Valley has always been the first and last destination for most Asian immigrants. Silicon Valley is the cheapest flight from Asia.
Most of the workers in Silicon Valley were educated in China and India, not Stanford. Their background is engineering all the way because they're not burdened with stupid black studies classes, history of homosexuality, and all the garbage Americans are forced to study. Asians have loads of money to fund businesses because their currency is priceless.
Those 200mm lenses are truly underappreciated masterpieces. They are so over engineered, they can exceed telescopes for most wide field astronomy. Unlike most telescopes of equivalent quality, the EF 200mm is portable.
As time progresses and more people can afford digital SLR's, the EF 200mm F2.8 L II is going to make a lot of astonomical discoveries.
Everyone knows that DVD has enough capacity to store the same content using H.264 as BD using MPEG-2. It's not about the disk capacity or whether it's DVD or BD. It's about the encryption.
It's not that it's unreliable. It's that if any one of the thousands of new options isn't exactly right, it crashes.
Hope they're happy with the result of their sacrifices for their company.
It's a tourist attraction. What is 90% of the bay area going to do, drive 50 miles from San Jose to San Francisco to participate in the Google revolution?
The fuel tank is flying without the PAL ramp. The decision was not to continue removing sections other than the PAL ramp. They have to do as little as possible and test each change in a real flight to know what works.
Jim Cramer wrote:
> Plus, AMD is a company now run by engineers, whereas it was once run by
> salespeople. During this management changeover, the company began to
> gain market share. Intel took the opposite route, Cramer said.
>
> The company was founded by engineers and scientists who
> "outmanufactured and outengineered the other guys." Now it is run by a
> sales guy, and the company is slipping, he said.
Have a feeling they're right when they say lines like that and they're wrong when Harvard says lines like
> the last thirty years have been dominated by professionals with
> strong analytical abilities...the future will depend on individuals
> with skills of inventiveness, empathy, joyfulness, and the ability to
> find meaning
The trade deficit says engineering produces more value.
Maybe this is the wrong forum to expect high-end consumer electronics to be sold because most of the readers are in college, but this looks like a clearance item that they've desperately asked slashdot to push.
The 24" Dell is regarded as the best of the best, but it's the monitory you'll encounter in your day jobs as soon as you get jobs. You don't want to pay for the same thing at home that you get at your day jobs. You want to pay for something better and that only leaves the 30" Dell.
Only 2 resellers have licenced the 30" panel for US and that's Dell and Apple, but Dell sells it for $300 less. While you can't see the Dell in person without going to Taiwan, you can see the same panel in the Apple store. It has problems with vignetting due to the sharp viewing angle imposed by its size, but it's still very good.
As long as LG restricts its licensees due to the collapsing dollar value, the 30" panels won't go down in price.
So what's the point? Sounds like a textbook article that you can make up yourself just by closing your eyes. "My company's great" "I love my job" "I want to be in upper management."
In typical fashion, the standard of living provided by Microsoft, what he's achieved, and comparisons to other companies are left out.
There's the usual badmouthing of middle management that you can read about in every garbage dumpster. Never a mention of the fact that lots of people write software that influences millions of people. Never a mention of the fact that lots of people write software that gets books written about it. Never a mention that the tools Microsoft provides to allow him to impact 30% of the product are available to anyone with a web browser.
True all images are doctored, but the ESA tends to go overboard with these split views, perspective views, and computer modelled views without ever showing what the original view looked like.
Been using Acuvue 2 all day with agitation when they're in cleaning solution. They dry out indeed, but they're not painful and compared to having an appliance on your face or performing irreversable eye surgery, they're the best solution.
These startup executives seem completely intent on raising publicity by announcing these grand wireless projects but have never made them happen and their location is so far away from the population that they're never used.
San Francisco is a tourist attraction. No-one actually lives there or works there and no-one is going to use a wireless network there. Most of the population lives in the east bay and works in the south bay. That's where a wireless network would be most valuable, but saying you're installing a wireless network in San Ramon just doesn't have the appeal that saying it's in San Francisco has.
The few and far between pictures of what Koreans consider robots show their definition of robot is more like a vending machine or an ATM. If their robot utopia was real, they would be helping u.s. in Iraq.
Every day there's a new "real reason" for DRM. There is one reason which always seems true no matter what the daily fad is. DVD players are $40 because you can download DVD players for free. Blu-Ray players are $1800 because you can't download Blu-Ray players for free.
Read the other slashdot articles and you see what Americans value. "design, ergonomics, real world use rather than artificial spec tests" "relationships with customers" "Sony more trustworthy"
In no headline is a clockspeed or a transisor count or a thermal rating discussed. What Americans want is philosophy and experiences and that's what you should be studying.
This was a very good NOVA documentary. It moved quickly and covered a lot of new ground in a short time, like the algorithms the robots used and the kinds of problems they solved, unlike most documentaries which repackage the same science anecdotes over and over or only discuss philosophy.
It wasn't as much the fact that Stanley won the race as how Stanley won the race and the differing approaches of the builders that made it interesting.
Unfortunately, it was not in HD. It was widescreen low definition. They can get robots to drive 120 miles but they still can't get HD.
They've been trying to push this UPnP/Viiv on us for 4 years now and it's never felt like it's taken off, but maybe it's just taken off for ultra high-end managers in some parallel universe while the flat broke 99% are being left out.
For the 99% of us who don't have offices or mansions, the "Viiv rendere" is going to be an HDMI cable from our studio apartment walk in closets to our discount LG LCD panels. Intel fanboys will rant about HDMI not being long enough. Why don't you come to America and find out what "tiny apartment" really means.
Moses wrote:
> Such multi-tasking makes dual-core processors a necessity, which
> explains why Intel requires all vendors of Viiv machines to adopt a
> dual-core processor before gaining certification.
So all along multitasking was impossible without Intel dual-core processors and Intel never did want our money. Moses is a genious.
But when is ATI going to finish implementing OpenGL 2.0 for Linux? In an interview, their VP's praised their policy of starting over frequently on new code bases, but they're behind NVidia on driver support.
There will be no playback of encrypted movies on the Sony PC. The poster failed to mention that nugget of information, or are we not supposed to bring that up on this site?