Unfortunately, neither my Steinberg UR-22 nor Asus Xonar d2x is supported in FreeBSD.
Both work out of the box on arch.
Funny thing is, these devices work even better in linux than windows (i.e. absolutely no installation in linux compared to massive driver downloads in windows that clutter the system)
It is possible to run a few games, but not with the performance you get in linux, and that's not the only problem. I play EVE via wine in Linux and I suspect it will run okish in FreeBSD too.....If I can boot without kernel panics which I haven't been able to on either my main gaming computer nor my gaming laptop.
Crashing a self compiled kernel is bad. Crashing with the GENERIC kernel means I uninstall and wait another year to see.
I run arch on all my workstations/laptops both at home and work. The servers at work run debian.
I've tried so many times to get freebsd on my computers, some it will work on, but far too often it will kernel panic on ACPI, smp, driver bug etc. Especially on recent computers.
Graphics/games is another thing. Now the most recent have started to implement the proper kernel features for nvidia blob, but it's still not as good as the linux driver, and I can't run steam except via wine.
I'm basically in the exact same situation. Never had any problems with leaving cash/wallet/phone on the desk overnight. Never heard of anything being stolen.
Guess it depends on the cleaners. Ours seem to be from Morocco, and I live in Norway.
My brother, uncle and boss is actually colour blind, and I always make sure to not put colours they have issues with where they could be confused. It's not what I was talking about.
If I make a mistake in this area and a manager comes to me with that I will change the format immediately and without a word.
I used to be in a laaaarge international bank as an analyst/reporter/model developer and I can concur with a lot of this. Usually we had all the data/reports but then had to redo them to change format or whatever.
I've been flung "your cash-flow analysis is wrong" since it didn't match up with marketing expectations.
I remember we build one score card using dummy variables instead of weights of evidence like the rest in the company, and only because of that we got more questions about this scorecard than the others combined even if it performed just fine. It had to be redeveloped using "corporate standards" all the while another card developed with "corporate standards" with a ks of 10% and psi of.30 would live on.
I left and now work as the sole analyst for a startup bank along with a lot of others in our old department. Much better:) I can use postgres/shiny/R/python and not worry.
For the OP: Management will want reports (and they want it in that font and that colour). Just get along or change field of work.
That's true, in the night we often turn off the hydro plants and import coal power from Germany or whatever since they cannot just turn off the plants overnight. And then we sell hydro power back in the day so the export is slightly higher than the imports.
We often laugh about the fact that while we have a lot of electric cars, they are all coal powered.
I live in Norway, we pay around $.12 including taxes and "line rent".
The price fluctuates with rain and season, but $.12 is about as high as it gets. I've seen as low as $.05
Most of the electricity comes from hydro plants (98.5%) and I think other renewables will have similar cost structure. High investment, very low marginal cost pr kwh.
In Hawaii for instance I'd guess you could build some geothermal plants like in Iceland
R is on the upswing so I wouldn't call it "still used" really:)
That said, you can make money knowing R. I am doing it, but you really need some database experience and possibly some python, c++ and the like.
SAS won't die in a _long_ time either, in the banks I've been too except for this last one have been using SAS almost exclusively.
The problem with SAS/R code is that neither is usually written by a programmer but a statistician that want something to work there and then. It can be a nightmare if you inherit too much legacy code.
Also, you actually need to know statistics to be effective:)
As you can see from the feature list of the pre-release of the next major version of minecraft, it does indeed support multiple cores now, at least for chunk rendering which has been the biggest performance problem before, and they are now using vbos instead of the old opengl interface.
These changes consist of both new features, and large game structure changes such as replacing the hard-coded "block renderer" with a system that is able to read block shapes from data files, or performance enhancements such as multi-threading the client-side chunk rendering. We hope you will enjoy it!
That is odd. I have 6rd via my fiber connection and youtube etc is so much better when connecting with ipv6. I suspect this is because no one are using those network paths yet, but maybe it's just the local content cache that sucks or something and ipv6 goes straight to google.
Wire-line ISP, you mean the ones connecting fiber and copper? If so, my provider sells me 100/100 mbit 24/7 unlimited that I pay about $80/month for. My record is 15 TB data transfer in one month, which according to the logs averaged out at about 50/50 for the whole month.
I have never heard them talk about caps or limits when I am on the phone with them. I even called them to cancel their TV service since I am only streaming and downloading. They said nothing but cancelled the TV.
My $30/month mobile plan only allows for 5 gb before throttling the speed. But that is in the contract and I have agreed to it. I never agreed to unlimited. If I had and they throttled me, I'd be pretty POd too.
No, you can't retrieve anything from my computers in that way even with my root password. The encryption keys are my own and I have full control over them. In the TFA case, apple has control over your keys.
will be in demand as long as we have computer that can break. If someone invents a completely self programming, self healing, self building computer then maybe not. Even if that happens I think you would need system operators for even these machines as someone has to tell them what to do even if it's only by spoken word or brain waves or whatever is the current input method.
Personally at least. I used to work in one of the largest banks in the world, and everything we did was SAS/MSSQL. I had some personal stuff in R, but most of the other analysts didn't seem too interested except using what I made for them except for one phd in the German department. I never pushed it though since there was so much legacy code, including code I had written my self.
Now I have switched to a start-up bank, and I am the only analyst. I've used R/RStudio/Shiny with PostgreSQL in the back very successfully, with all code in git. Now I can bring good analysis forth much faster than I used to in SAS that can be viewed on any device with the option of downloading the source data in excel and csv.
The management loves this.
If you show them a few good ones they will want more, but I wouldn't start to rewrite all the legacy code. SAS isn't bad when you have it set up properly.
But another good thing about R is that you get access to innovation in the statistics fields faster, and you don't have to pay huge sums of money for extra features.
RStudio and Shiny is a bit expensive for the pro versions, but nothing compared to SAS, and the open source versions are free.
I bet there are lots of other applications that utilize d3d and want to port to linux that can use this directly.
I've met people that actually prefer d3d over opengl (don't ask me why), so I think it's going to have much wider use than wine.
Unfortunately, neither my Steinberg UR-22 nor Asus Xonar d2x is supported in FreeBSD.
Both work out of the box on arch.
Funny thing is, these devices work even better in linux than windows (i.e. absolutely no installation in linux compared to massive driver downloads in windows that clutter the system)
It is possible to run a few games, but not with the performance you get in linux, and that's not the only problem. ....If I can boot without kernel panics which I haven't been able to on either my main gaming computer nor my gaming laptop.
I play EVE via wine in Linux and I suspect it will run okish in FreeBSD too.
Crashing a self compiled kernel is bad.
Crashing with the GENERIC kernel means I uninstall and wait another year to see.
As I said, Linux just works.
I run arch on all my workstations/laptops both at home and work. The servers at work run debian.
I've tried so many times to get freebsd on my computers, some it will work on, but far too often it will kernel panic on ACPI, smp, driver bug etc. Especially on recent computers.
Graphics/games is another thing.
Now the most recent have started to implement the proper kernel features for nvidia blob, but it's still not as good as the linux driver, and I can't run steam except via wine.
Linux just works, that's why I use it.
I'm basically in the exact same situation. Never had any problems with leaving cash/wallet/phone on the desk overnight.
Never heard of anything being stolen.
Guess it depends on the cleaners. Ours seem to be from Morocco, and I live in Norway.
My brother, uncle and boss is actually colour blind, and I always make sure to not put colours they have issues with where they could be confused.
It's not what I was talking about.
If I make a mistake in this area and a manager comes to me with that I will change the format immediately and without a word.
I used to be in a laaaarge international bank as an analyst/reporter/model developer and I can concur with a lot of this.
Usually we had all the data/reports but then had to redo them to change format or whatever.
I've been flung "your cash-flow analysis is wrong" since it didn't match up with marketing expectations.
I remember we build one score card using dummy variables instead of weights of evidence like the rest in the company, and only because of that we got more questions about this scorecard than the others combined even if it performed just fine. .30 would live on.
It had to be redeveloped using "corporate standards" all the while another card developed with "corporate standards" with a ks of 10% and psi of
I left and now work as the sole analyst for a startup bank along with a lot of others in our old department. :)
Much better
I can use postgres/shiny/R/python and not worry.
For the OP: Management will want reports (and they want it in that font and that colour). Just get along or change field of work.
That's true, in the night we often turn off the hydro plants and import coal power from Germany or whatever since they cannot just turn off the plants overnight. And then we sell hydro power back in the day so the export is slightly higher than the imports.
We often laugh about the fact that while we have a lot of electric cars, they are all coal powered.
The price fluctuates with rain and season, but $.12 is about as high as it gets. I've seen as low as $.05
Most of the electricity comes from hydro plants (98.5%) and I think other renewables will have similar cost structure. High investment, very low marginal cost pr kwh.
In Hawaii for instance I'd guess you could build some geothermal plants like in Iceland
R is on the upswing so I wouldn't call it "still used" really :)
That said, you can make money knowing R. I am doing it, but you really need some database experience and possibly some python, c++ and the like.
SAS won't die in a _long_ time either, in the banks I've been too except for this last one have been using SAS almost exclusively.
The problem with SAS/R code is that neither is usually written by a programmer but a statistician that want something to work there and then.
It can be a nightmare if you inherit too much legacy code.
Also, you actually need to know statistics to be effective :)
I've been using KDEnlive a lot, and I find it really nice for my personal use.
It hasn't crashed in about a year either, and uses MELT underneath.
Slightly OT: I've also replaced adobe lightroom with darktable now, and I like it a lot.
https://mojang.com/2014/08/minecraft-1-8-pre-release-the-bountiful-update/
These changes consist of both new features, and large game structure changes such as replacing the hard-coded "block renderer" with a system that is able to read block shapes from data files, or performance enhancements such as multi-threading the client-side chunk rendering. We hope you will enjoy it!
That is odd. I have 6rd via my fiber connection and youtube etc is so much better when connecting with ipv6.
I suspect this is because no one are using those network paths yet, but maybe it's just the local content cache that sucks or something and ipv6 goes straight to google.
Wire-line ISP, you mean the ones connecting fiber and copper?
If so, my provider sells me 100/100 mbit 24/7 unlimited that I pay about $80/month for.
My record is 15 TB data transfer in one month, which according to the logs averaged out at about 50/50 for the whole month.
I have never heard them talk about caps or limits when I am on the phone with them. I even called them to cancel their TV service since I am only streaming and downloading. They said nothing but cancelled the TV.
My $30/month mobile plan only allows for 5 gb before throttling the speed. But that is in the contract and I have agreed to it. I never agreed to unlimited. If I had and they throttled me, I'd be pretty POd too.
The NAS OS is linux and the BT client is just transmission with a web interface.
But it is nicely put together :)
No, you can't retrieve anything from my computers in that way even with my root password.
The encryption keys are my own and I have full control over them.
In the TFA case, apple has control over your keys.
will be in demand as long as we have computer that can break.
If someone invents a completely self programming, self healing, self building computer then maybe not.
Even if that happens I think you would need system operators for even these machines as someone has to tell them what to do even if it's only by spoken word or brain waves or whatever is the current input method.
Personally at least.
I used to work in one of the largest banks in the world, and everything we did was SAS/MSSQL.
I had some personal stuff in R, but most of the other analysts didn't seem too interested except using what I made for them except for one phd in the German department. I never pushed it though since there was so much legacy code, including code I had written my self.
Now I have switched to a start-up bank, and I am the only analyst.
I've used R/RStudio/Shiny with PostgreSQL in the back very successfully, with all code in git. Now I can bring good analysis forth much faster than I used to in SAS that can be viewed on any device with the option of downloading the source data in excel and csv.
The management loves this.
If you show them a few good ones they will want more, but I wouldn't start to rewrite all the legacy code. SAS isn't bad when you have it set up properly.
But another good thing about R is that you get access to innovation in the statistics fields faster, and you don't have to pay huge sums of money for extra features.
RStudio and Shiny is a bit expensive for the pro versions, but nothing compared to SAS, and the open source versions are free.
And it was true.
The internet in the early 90s was _slow_.
I didn't get cable with 10 mbit until 1996ish, and even that was slow!
Are we still dealing with metering on regular internet connections?
We have that here on 4g broadband services, I think the last time I checked, you could get 100 GB 4g up to 80 mbit broadband for $100 a month.
But I prefer 100/100 mbit unmetered fiber for the same price though :)
35 GB takes me 47 minutes to download on this 100/100 connection.
Fiber is becoming the standard, so I don't think it would be a big deterrent.
I would actually be more concerned about the space it would hog on my SSD drives ;)
And the reason those 20% still use it is because of company lock-in / legacy web apps.
Even my almost 70 year old mother is on Firefox without me being involved.
It's the old KOffice.
Krita is probably the most usefull of the apps and I've already replaced GIMP with it, however the rest are also slowly maturing :)
Here in Norway they go even further, and the company is not allowed to read your email if it is put in a folder clearly marked private.
Personally I keep my private and work emails in separate systems, but it seems that a lot of people are using their work email for private stuff.
Posting to remove moderation.
I realize this was not meant to be funny, but serious.