I've been running OpenMesh units in greenhouses and barns for about 6 years now. I like them. I prefer running ethernet to each node but in a pinch I'll set them up as a wifi only unit. Total bandwidth performance cuts in half each time you make them do a wifi hop so I avoid them.
The management tools are all online and super easy. Support staff is also excellent if you ever need them. I've only had one need but boy I was impressed.
And they're like $100 per unit, kind of hard to beat that. If you can run PoE to them install is even easier.
As far as I know Linus has only ever exploded at people who have ignored previous warnings/questions about their code or behaviour.
Nope. I don't follow kernel development much these days but I still remember Alan Cox quitting about 20 years ago when Linus tore into him over how he was fixing a bug. Cox was basically #2 in the kernel world at the time. It's an excellent example of the kernel losing a quality developer simply because Linus couldn't keep himself civil.
(who do you know who never uses sexual swear-words?)
In a professional setting? Pretty much everybody. Those that can't keep uncivil things from popping out of their mouths don't last for long nor should they.
Have you tried Mint? The default Cinnamon desktop install works pretty well for me. I've been running Linux as a home desktop since 1998 or so and that's probably the best out of the box setup I've ever seen.
As a tribute to the days of early Slashdot I suggest we post this article to the site no less than 4 times over the next 8 days. It's not what Roblimo would have wanted but it's probably what he would have done.
"Some" researchers are saying the BSDs are dying so it must be true, huh? "Read it on the internet, hot damn, must be true then." Bullshit! The BSDs have a large community that is passionate about their choice of operating system.
I wouldn't put my stock in the BSD is dying chant. That's been appearing on Slashdot since October 5, 1997.
Not so much below the limit that is safe for the bees, hmm?
Given that the bees didn't die and they were able to carry out their primary mission (bring food back to the hive) I'd say their exposure was below acceptable limits.
Odd that they didn't look for other pesticide classifications like organophosphates, carbamates, pyretheroids, abamectins, etc. No, wait, it's not because they flat out kill bees with very minimal exposure. Neonics are one of the few things they can actually tolerate. Hell, cyantraniliprole, a fairly new chemical in the ryanoid class that was brought to market specifically to supplant neonics when they got the "bee killer" label flat out kills bees and hornets if you apply when they're around. I've used it for that. On purpose. The stuff we're supposed to use instead of neonics friggen kills bees. Nobody's surprised by that because it's still an insecticide and bees are insects, but it's not a "neonic" so nobody is going to ask if you use it.
I've seen the problem on two BT headsets and also on my BT car stereo. I don't see it very often on the car stereo probably because I only ever drive 20-30 minutes at a time. I suspect the problem is related to the hardware heating up and throwing something off. As another poster in this thread has said the problem seems to be related to WiFi being on too, and I suspect the same chip handles WiFi and BT. Just a guess. If it's a heat problem then an active WiFi connection and BT could be heating it up sooner or higher. For me it doesn't help one whit if I turn WiFi off though. I think that's because I generally use my BT connection in a belly pouch when running or cycling where the thing will get hotter than normal.
Given that the original Pixel is absolutely horrible at playing back music via Bluetooth I'd call this a pretty ballsy move. Google doesn't appear to have any idea how to fix the problem on the Pixel either. Mine will start skipping during music so bad you'd think I was listening to a CD player in 1994 going down a gravel road.
If you're charging the cards via a web app all they need is a keyboard logger to record them and some malware to ship off the stored data to them. Or just a USB dongle installed locally to record keyboard input and then they can pick it up later from the terminal.
Just because you're not intentionally storing the CC records electronically doesn't mean you're safe. Somebody else might be storing them for you.
Mums won't do much of anything to keep bugs out. Yes we get pyrethrin from them but whatever amounts are in the flower are pretty small. This time of year western flower thrip and two spotted spider mite are a problem in mums. While both can be treated with pyrethrins/pyretheroids according to product labels they basically stopped working a few years back. If going after them with concentrated synthetic versions of pyrethrin doesn't work the natural amount in the plant certainly won't.
I've got around 50,000 mums in our greenhouse right now. Trust me. I'm also one of the pesticide applicators.
GMO is bad because GMO has been used to have plants make toxins. So GMO food can contain poison.
You mean the BT expressing crops? The ones that make crystal protein structures identical to what's made by the organic pesticide BT? You can drop the exact same stuff on organic crops and there's no limit to how much can be on a food crop at harvest. The stuff is so safe the FDA doesn't care if you eat it.
You're seeing a conspiracy where there is none and immediately jumping to a worst possible conclusion. Nobody is planing on forcing you or anyone else to use smart guns.
New Jersey has a law on the books already that will mandate use of smart guns once they're commercially available. Law enforcement is, of course, exempt from the rule.
Nitrogen is the name used in describing the macro-nutrients in fertilizer. While you generally see something like ammonium nitrate used as the source of available nitrogen you also have stuff like urea which, while I'm not a chemist, I do not believe is actually a nitrate.
The end result, however, is that nitrogen is available to the plant which is the ultimate goal. Hence referring to anything in the N of NPK as nitrogen.
We wouldn't hold an election if the president and vice president were both skilled. There's a long list of people that are next in line. Specifically, in order:
- Speaker of the House - President of the Senate - Secretary of State - Secretary of Treasury - Secretary of Defense - Attorney General - Secretary of the Interior - Secretary of Agriculture - Secretary of Commerce - Secretary of labor - Secretary of Health and Human Services - Secretary of Housing and Urban Development - Secretary of Transportation - Secretary of Energy - Secretary of Education - Secretary of Veterans Affairs - Secretary of Homeland Security
I don't make any mental "sounds" when I read code because I parse through it way too fast but when I'm writing it I do, translating it into something for my brain to type out. I make a lot of beeps and grunts in my head because of that. Parens are a "hernk" noise which get louder the deeper they're nested and semi-colons and periods generally become a 'boop' or "donk." Curly braces are we weird "hurrah"-ish sound on opening and on closing a sad-ish "hurrah."
Despite doing this stuff for the last 25 years I'd never thought about it until today.
I've been running OpenMesh units in greenhouses and barns for about 6 years now. I like them. I prefer running ethernet to each node but in a pinch I'll set them up as a wifi only unit. Total bandwidth performance cuts in half each time you make them do a wifi hop so I avoid them.
The management tools are all online and super easy. Support staff is also excellent if you ever need them. I've only had one need but boy I was impressed.
And they're like $100 per unit, kind of hard to beat that. If you can run PoE to them install is even easier.
They know not to give this thing a machine gun, right?
Nope. I don't follow kernel development much these days but I still remember Alan Cox quitting about 20 years ago when Linus tore into him over how he was fixing a bug. Cox was basically #2 in the kernel world at the time. It's an excellent example of the kernel losing a quality developer simply because Linus couldn't keep himself civil.
In a professional setting? Pretty much everybody. Those that can't keep uncivil things from popping out of their mouths don't last for long nor should they.
Have you tried Mint? The default Cinnamon desktop install works pretty well for me. I've been running Linux as a home desktop since 1998 or so and that's probably the best out of the box setup I've ever seen.
Alexa: "To confirm you'd like to send this message repeat 5... 6... 8"
User: "5... 6... 8"
There. Pick 3 random positive integers for the send code each time.
As a tribute to the days of early Slashdot I suggest we post this article to the site no less than 4 times over the next 8 days. It's not what Roblimo would have wanted but it's probably what he would have done.
If you want to stay away from Oracle MySQL is a bad choice. They own it.
MariaDB on the other hand...
Wait, that wasn't an April Fools joke? Holy shit! I better go find some kind of tech news website to read up about this!
The reserves had M1 Garands, not M-16s.
You can say that twice!
I wouldn't put my stock in the BSD is dying chant. That's been appearing on Slashdot since October 5, 1997.
The whole customer service departments of all three aren't on MS Office now? That's like.. four... people? SUCK IT MICROSOFT!
Completely false. OMRI is the group that certifies them in the US. https://www.omri.org/
Or I might actually know something.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... ... considered only moderately toxic to bees.
Given that the bees didn't die and they were able to carry out their primary mission (bring food back to the hive) I'd say their exposure was below acceptable limits.
Odd that they didn't look for other pesticide classifications like organophosphates, carbamates, pyretheroids, abamectins, etc. No, wait, it's not because they flat out kill bees with very minimal exposure. Neonics are one of the few things they can actually tolerate. Hell, cyantraniliprole, a fairly new chemical in the ryanoid class that was brought to market specifically to supplant neonics when they got the "bee killer" label flat out kills bees and hornets if you apply when they're around. I've used it for that. On purpose. The stuff we're supposed to use instead of neonics friggen kills bees. Nobody's surprised by that because it's still an insecticide and bees are insects, but it's not a "neonic" so nobody is going to ask if you use it.
I've seen the problem on two BT headsets and also on my BT car stereo. I don't see it very often on the car stereo probably because I only ever drive 20-30 minutes at a time. I suspect the problem is related to the hardware heating up and throwing something off. As another poster in this thread has said the problem seems to be related to WiFi being on too, and I suspect the same chip handles WiFi and BT. Just a guess. If it's a heat problem then an active WiFi connection and BT could be heating it up sooner or higher. For me it doesn't help one whit if I turn WiFi off though. I think that's because I generally use my BT connection in a belly pouch when running or cycling where the thing will get hotter than normal.
It occurred in the 7.x series and in the latest 8.0 releases that came out. It's not a new problem and resolutions do not appear to be coming.
Given that the original Pixel is absolutely horrible at playing back music via Bluetooth I'd call this a pretty ballsy move. Google doesn't appear to have any idea how to fix the problem on the Pixel either. Mine will start skipping during music so bad you'd think I was listening to a CD player in 1994 going down a gravel road.
If you're charging the cards via a web app all they need is a keyboard logger to record them and some malware to ship off the stored data to them. Or just a USB dongle installed locally to record keyboard input and then they can pick it up later from the terminal.
Just because you're not intentionally storing the CC records electronically doesn't mean you're safe. Somebody else might be storing them for you.
Mums won't do much of anything to keep bugs out. Yes we get pyrethrin from them but whatever amounts are in the flower are pretty small. This time of year western flower thrip and two spotted spider mite are a problem in mums. While both can be treated with pyrethrins/pyretheroids according to product labels they basically stopped working a few years back. If going after them with concentrated synthetic versions of pyrethrin doesn't work the natural amount in the plant certainly won't.
I've got around 50,000 mums in our greenhouse right now. Trust me. I'm also one of the pesticide applicators.
You mean the BT expressing crops? The ones that make crystal protein structures identical to what's made by the organic pesticide BT? You can drop the exact same stuff on organic crops and there's no limit to how much can be on a food crop at harvest. The stuff is so safe the FDA doesn't care if you eat it.
New Jersey has a law on the books already that will mandate use of smart guns once they're commercially available. Law enforcement is, of course, exempt from the rule.
Nitrogen is the name used in describing the macro-nutrients in fertilizer. While you generally see something like ammonium nitrate used as the source of available nitrogen you also have stuff like urea which, while I'm not a chemist, I do not believe is actually a nitrate.
The end result, however, is that nitrogen is available to the plant which is the ultimate goal. Hence referring to anything in the N of NPK as nitrogen.
We wouldn't hold an election if the president and vice president were both skilled. There's a long list of people that are next in line. Specifically, in order:
- Speaker of the House
- President of the Senate
- Secretary of State
- Secretary of Treasury
- Secretary of Defense
- Attorney General
- Secretary of the Interior
- Secretary of Agriculture
- Secretary of Commerce
- Secretary of labor
- Secretary of Health and Human Services
- Secretary of Housing and Urban Development
- Secretary of Transportation
- Secretary of Energy
- Secretary of Education
- Secretary of Veterans Affairs
- Secretary of Homeland Security
We've thought this through I guess.
I don't make any mental "sounds" when I read code because I parse through it way too fast but when I'm writing it I do, translating it into something for my brain to type out. I make a lot of beeps and grunts in my head because of that. Parens are a "hernk" noise which get louder the deeper they're nested and semi-colons and periods generally become a 'boop' or "donk." Curly braces are we weird "hurrah"-ish sound on opening and on closing a sad-ish "hurrah."
Despite doing this stuff for the last 25 years I'd never thought about it until today.