I fail to understand why this is newsworthy. Next we will see an article about how you can buy hammers nearly anywhere and they can be used to do massive damage to cars, PCs, laptops, monitors, cell phones with no training at all!
While I'm not going to suggest geographical state boundaries being gerrymandered, It absolutely IS possible to gerrymandered the electoral college. All you need to do is affect the census which assigns electoral college votes based on census results. Suppressing your opponents response to the census will suppress the electoral college allocation to your opponents.
The house did pass a bill. It was never taken up for a vote with the senate. As far as the emergency nature of this, it does seem like this has immediate life threatening implications as the Streisand effect of this capability will likely lead to an ex boyfriend/girlfriend/whomever finding where someone is hiding and assaulting them.
There are 1266 people in that town as of the last census. This contract was supposed to be for 15 years. Assuming the interest cost for both infrastructures was the same, there was a cost difference of ~940K. Averaging that cost per month over 15 years amongst the 1266 people yields a monthly cost of 4.12$. I find it hard to believe that comcast was going to provide service cheaper than the municipal would. And I find it very easy to believe they can do it for less than 5$ a month cheaper than comcast.
I wouldn't call the chance non-zero. Google may way see this a a thread to them, especially if it goes global. They have a vested interest in this not being a thing. Apple has already fought against this kind of thing in the US courts, so I wouldn't be surprised if they don't take a stand as well.
Locate your recording device in the cloud and only stream what you are actually watching. You could theoretically record ALL channels, rather than just a few.
Please don't write 6 million Kilograms. You are literally writing 6 million thousand grams. Either write 6 billion grams, or preferably use the SI system as it was intended and express it as 6 Gigagrams.
A company has something stolen from it. They traces it to a storage locker, proves to a judge it is in the storage locker, and requests information on the owner so they can purse legal action. This is all this case is. The fact the storage locker is digital and the goods are digital doesn't matter.
Actually, all I want is an RDP session into my server or server cluster to get performance. I can travel with a light, low power laptop that just has to render the RDP session. This is not something I'd recommend for gaming, but it very useful for actual high performance computing applications.
When these laws were conceived (and when the constitution was written) the idea that mass scale surveillance like this was completely uneconomical or flat out impossible. Citizens do not have an expectation that a cop could examine my license plate upon some reason or suspicion. They do have an expectation that the city does not hire a cop for every citizen to follow them around and report the citizens every move. Just because we do it with a computer rather than an actual police officer does not make it ok. Just like accessing a website for the intended uses should be allowed but aggregating and scraping the website for all of it's content is not.
While I agree with most of your statement, cryptocurrencies do provide a real service. That service is a non-centralized bank transaction. The real value of this non-centralized bank transaction is where the speculation comes into play. That all being said, I don't think see such a network as being sustainable as the cost of transactions is exponential over time.
Your assuming the new product can't be made for less than the current product. You are also assuming the existence of a new, better product into the market place doesn't increase the size of a market place. Both assumptions are patently false in this case.
A fast CPU will generate ~0.25Mh/s. That CPU is approximately 40 times faster than an s5, so 0.00625 Mh/s. A typical ASIC box can generate 4.3Th/s. So That's 4,300GH/s or 4,300,000 Mh/s. So a single ASIC box, commercially available for less than a grand, can mine the same amount of coins per day as 688,000,000 galaxy s5s. Wikipedia say they sold 12 million galaxy s5's in the first 3 months. Let's assume that's 1/3rd the amount the ever made. That mean's a single ASIC (Antminer s7) can mine 19 times more a day than every samsung galaxy s5 in existence today. It'll do all that on 1600W, while the galaxy s5's at a very conservative 5w each, would require 3.4GW. For scale, the Palo Verde nuclear power plant in Arizona has three nuclear reactors and has the largest combined electricity generating capacity of nuclear reactors in the US at about 3.9 GW
CAPTCHA was always broken by 3rd world economies. I can pay someone less than a dollar an hour to sit at a computer where I can reroute the CAPTCHA question for them to answer. It doesn't matter if you come up with a 100% accurate CAPTCHA as I have a human answering the question for less than a penny.
It still (and always will) takes more energy to split water into H2 and O2 than is released putting it back together. It is an efficient way to store energy, but it doesn't make energy, it uses it. This is a battery, not a power source.
Or retired, or disabled, or they don't have kids but the wife chooses not to work. There are a lot of reasons why people who are not employed are not unemployed. The assumptions are clearly laid out in the SIX different unemployment rates published by the Dept of Labor. For uses of the data, different assumptions should be made.
I fail to understand why this is newsworthy. Next we will see an article about how you can buy hammers nearly anywhere and they can be used to do massive damage to cars, PCs, laptops, monitors, cell phones with no training at all!
There isn't any doubt, because he was killed there was no trial. However, I agree alleged should not be used here.
This is my shocked face. :|
While I'm not going to suggest geographical state boundaries being gerrymandered, It absolutely IS possible to gerrymandered the electoral college. All you need to do is affect the census which assigns electoral college votes based on census results. Suppressing your opponents response to the census will suppress the electoral college allocation to your opponents.
The house did pass a bill. It was never taken up for a vote with the senate. As far as the emergency nature of this, it does seem like this has immediate life threatening implications as the Streisand effect of this capability will likely lead to an ex boyfriend/girlfriend/whomever finding where someone is hiding and assaulting them.
There are 1266 people in that town as of the last census. This contract was supposed to be for 15 years. Assuming the interest cost for both infrastructures was the same, there was a cost difference of ~940K. Averaging that cost per month over 15 years amongst the 1266 people yields a monthly cost of 4.12$. I find it hard to believe that comcast was going to provide service cheaper than the municipal would. And I find it very easy to believe they can do it for less than 5$ a month cheaper than comcast.
This. Also, if you don't want frame interpolation, maybe start shooting your movies at 120fps instead of 24. Then we won't need interpolation.
I wouldn't call the chance non-zero. Google may way see this a a thread to them, especially if it goes global. They have a vested interest in this not being a thing. Apple has already fought against this kind of thing in the US courts, so I wouldn't be surprised if they don't take a stand as well.
Locate your recording device in the cloud and only stream what you are actually watching. You could theoretically record ALL channels, rather than just a few.
Please don't write 6 million Kilograms. You are literally writing 6 million thousand grams. Either write 6 billion grams, or preferably use the SI system as it was intended and express it as 6 Gigagrams.
Don't bring personal/business electronics across borders. It's that simple.
Well that's annoying as shit. Guess I'll hold off on updating my phone to 9.0 until this gets fixed.
A company has something stolen from it. They traces it to a storage locker, proves to a judge it is in the storage locker, and requests information on the owner so they can purse legal action. This is all this case is. The fact the storage locker is digital and the goods are digital doesn't matter.
Actually, all I want is an RDP session into my server or server cluster to get performance. I can travel with a light, low power laptop that just has to render the RDP session. This is not something I'd recommend for gaming, but it very useful for actual high performance computing applications.
When these laws were conceived (and when the constitution was written) the idea that mass scale surveillance like this was completely uneconomical or flat out impossible. Citizens do not have an expectation that a cop could examine my license plate upon some reason or suspicion. They do have an expectation that the city does not hire a cop for every citizen to follow them around and report the citizens every move. Just because we do it with a computer rather than an actual police officer does not make it ok. Just like accessing a website for the intended uses should be allowed but aggregating and scraping the website for all of it's content is not.
Video data is treated differently than data. Treating any data differently than any other data violates the principle of net neutrality.
Yeah, that's kinda the point of positive cash flow / profitability...
While I agree with most of your statement, cryptocurrencies do provide a real service. That service is a non-centralized bank transaction. The real value of this non-centralized bank transaction is where the speculation comes into play. That all being said, I don't think see such a network as being sustainable as the cost of transactions is exponential over time.
Your assuming the new product can't be made for less than the current product. You are also assuming the existence of a new, better product into the market place doesn't increase the size of a market place. Both assumptions are patently false in this case.
Eminent Domain is clearly the answer. The city should buy the polls from AT&T and Comcast. They would then be free to regulate them at will.
A fast CPU will generate ~0.25Mh/s. That CPU is approximately 40 times faster than an s5, so 0.00625 Mh/s. A typical ASIC box can generate 4.3Th/s. So That's 4,300GH/s or 4,300,000 Mh/s. So a single ASIC box, commercially available for less than a grand, can mine the same amount of coins per day as 688,000,000 galaxy s5s. Wikipedia say they sold 12 million galaxy s5's in the first 3 months. Let's assume that's 1/3rd the amount the ever made. That mean's a single ASIC (Antminer s7) can mine 19 times more a day than every samsung galaxy s5 in existence today. It'll do all that on 1600W, while the galaxy s5's at a very conservative 5w each, would require 3.4GW. For scale, the Palo Verde nuclear power plant in Arizona has three nuclear reactors and has the largest combined electricity generating capacity of nuclear reactors in the US at about 3.9 GW
CAPTCHA was always broken by 3rd world economies. I can pay someone less than a dollar an hour to sit at a computer where I can reroute the CAPTCHA question for them to answer. It doesn't matter if you come up with a 100% accurate CAPTCHA as I have a human answering the question for less than a penny.
Which you can get by connecting a very cheap device to the internet and to the TV. A device made by people who actually understand security.
It still (and always will) takes more energy to split water into H2 and O2 than is released putting it back together. It is an efficient way to store energy, but it doesn't make energy, it uses it. This is a battery, not a power source.
Or retired, or disabled, or they don't have kids but the wife chooses not to work. There are a lot of reasons why people who are not employed are not unemployed. The assumptions are clearly laid out in the SIX different unemployment rates published by the Dept of Labor. For uses of the data, different assumptions should be made.