There's also a trend of all assets being bought by another company, who then overvalues each individual asset such that this sort of venture can't happen.
I doubt they'll increase in price fast enough to justify storing them. The octanes alone would be worth a mint melted down, as there's an unnatural amount of metal in those things.
Yes. When I installed the Beta I felt it was noticeable faster than XP on my old laptop (single core 1.1GHz 1.25Gb RAM), but the RC release feels sluggish.
That would make bluetooth mice impossible to use with games. This isn't true. They're still not as good as wired mice, but they're not bad. The refresh rate is noticeable lower, which can be an issue, but only for the hardcore.
Yes. The dongle will be in HID mode, so simply presents as a basic keyboard/mouse. Otherwise users of bluetooth keyboards would be up the creek with using the BIOS, or anything else that doesn't have a bluetooth stack.
No, Exchange 2007 does not work with any IMAP email client. For that, it'd have to properly implement the IMAP spec.
You know, little things like reporting the correct RFC822.SIZE, returning useful content encodings for rfc822/message attachments, doing searches on email addresses on more than just the display name component, searching across multiple mailboxes properly, not crashing in a huge heap when users with slightly odd AD accounts connect...
Mmm what other things is it crap at. It doesn't supported the "Forwarded" flag for messages, which is impressively crap.
But surely systems like KERS show that with only a small weight penalty (from around 25kg), and a decent amount of power (~80bhp), you can already get there. Now as long as you don't need to be using that often, and can simply clutch it out while not using it, it's just 25kg of dead weight while trying to be efficient.
This is assuming that you've got another much more efficient lower powered motor for the rest of the time.
25kg just isn't such a huge weight to carry in any vehicle intended to carry 2+ people, and you don't need that much power to make a car perfectly good to drive, as long as it's not stupidly heavy.
Teehee. That's the sort of crap someone who didn't own an Itanium box would say. If only an Itanium could run a typical desktop binary compiled for IA64 as fast as an x86_64 box that costs half as much.
If I turn http off for my domain, but users type in http, then your malicious hacker can intercept the http request (even though it would never succeed), and respond with a redirect to https.
So turning off http does not solve this problem. It's still not a bug with SSL though.
That's simply not true. I use Nvidia Quadro cards for active and passive stereo under linux, and have been for years. It works kinda like you'd expect stereo to work.
With Vista they've made it doubly annoying, as Windows Defender gets updates *all* the time. So if you've got it set to notify, you get a whole lot of nagging. If only you could pre-approve Windows Defender updates...
I noticed that too, but I don't remember seeing that previously. It was probably a change apple made in advance of the ASA ruling to show willing.
Re:They are using RPM 4.6.0 release candidate
on
Fedora 10 Released
·
· Score: 4, Insightful
I think you hit it right on the head. Fedora can do this, because that's what it's for. It avoids getting trapped behind painful changes because of worries that it'll cause short term pain.
Fedora should be all about long term gain, and if RPM 4.6 is a little bit experimental, great. Let's get the bugs out in the open and sort it out.
No it's not, it's a graphics card. Most people buying them will be doing it for realtime rendering. Something like volume rendering can use boatloads of memory. Certainly we were using 1Gbyte of texture memory in 2000 on SGI machines.
To an extent it's just because that's what sells papers. There are always kids being stabbed and planes crashing and data being lost. It's just if kids being stabbed becomes a hot topic, you print more stories on stabbed kids.
I really don't think much has changed, but the Mail is keen to point out that the world is ending, and it's probably Johnny Foreigner's fault.
I think that's a little harsh. Most peoples experiences of RAID5 are based around rubbish RAID controllers, which to be honest are possibly in the majority.
RAID5 is a compromise, same as any other RAID level. With a good battery backed controller (as opposed to a bad battery backed controller, or one without) it's reasonably fast and reasonably safe. For some definition of reasonably. And the real winner, is it doesn't waste huge amounts of disk, so you can convince people to use it.
Schneier looks to be wrong about multiple CAs. They don't cause the problem he's talking about.
Without having a global CA:
UKCA can make certs USCA can make certs
I trust certs from both CAs. I only trust UKCA with certs/C=UK and USCA with/C=US. Both CAs can make certificates for the other country, but that doesn't mean the end user trusts it.
Define lousy decision. If I've got a single batch job that wants all physical memory and then some, and I've got some pesky interactive tools in memory that I'm not currently using, they get paged out. When I come back to use firefox, I'm in for a big wait.
There's also a trend of all assets being bought by another company, who then overvalues each individual asset such that this sort of venture can't happen.
Does rsyncing the pref.js across a few thousand machines not count?
I doubt they'll increase in price fast enough to justify storing them. The octanes alone would be worth a mint melted down, as there's an unnatural amount of metal in those things.
Yes. When I installed the Beta I felt it was noticeable faster than XP on my old laptop (single core 1.1GHz 1.25Gb RAM), but the RC release feels sluggish.
That would make bluetooth mice impossible to use with games. This isn't true. They're still not as good as wired mice, but they're not bad. The refresh rate is noticeable lower, which can be an issue, but only for the hardcore.
Yes. The dongle will be in HID mode, so simply presents as a basic keyboard/mouse. Otherwise users of bluetooth keyboards would be up the creek with using the BIOS, or anything else that doesn't have a bluetooth stack.
No, Exchange 2007 does not work with any IMAP email client. For that, it'd have to properly implement the IMAP spec.
You know, little things like reporting the correct RFC822.SIZE, returning useful content encodings for rfc822/message attachments, doing searches on email addresses on more than just the display name component, searching across multiple mailboxes properly, not crashing in a huge heap when users with slightly odd AD accounts connect...
Mmm what other things is it crap at. It doesn't supported the "Forwarded" flag for messages, which is impressively crap.
But surely systems like KERS show that with only a small weight penalty (from around 25kg), and a decent amount of power (~80bhp), you can already get there. Now as long as you don't need to be using that often, and can simply clutch it out while not using it, it's just 25kg of dead weight while trying to be efficient.
This is assuming that you've got another much more efficient lower powered motor for the rest of the time.
25kg just isn't such a huge weight to carry in any vehicle intended to carry 2+ people, and you don't need that much power to make a car perfectly good to drive, as long as it's not stupidly heavy.
Driving at speed with the windows open burns more fuel than having them shut, due to increased drag.
Teehee. That's the sort of crap someone who didn't own an Itanium box would say. If only an Itanium could run a typical desktop binary compiled for IA64 as fast as an x86_64 box that costs half as much.
A more correct google gives:
UK: 59
US: 1186
Cut out the 'in the UK bit'. A quick google gives me outdated figures for 2005/6:
UK: 59
US: 5702
He didn't fail the test. He's failed many others, but not this one.
Pay to free him?
If I turn http off for my domain, but users type in http, then your malicious hacker can intercept the http request (even though it would never succeed), and respond with a redirect to https.
So turning off http does not solve this problem. It's still not a bug with SSL though.
That's simply not true. I use Nvidia Quadro cards for active and passive stereo under linux, and have been for years. It works kinda like you'd expect stereo to work.
With Vista they've made it doubly annoying, as Windows Defender gets updates *all* the time. So if you've got it set to notify, you get a whole lot of nagging. If only you could pre-approve Windows Defender updates...
I noticed that too, but I don't remember seeing that previously. It was probably a change apple made in advance of the ASA ruling to show willing.
I think you hit it right on the head. Fedora can do this, because that's what it's for. It avoids getting trapped behind painful changes because of worries that it'll cause short term pain.
Fedora should be all about long term gain, and if RPM 4.6 is a little bit experimental, great. Let's get the bugs out in the open and sort it out.
No it's not, it's a graphics card. Most people buying them will be doing it for realtime rendering. Something like volume rendering can use boatloads of memory. Certainly we were using 1Gbyte of texture memory in 2000 on SGI machines.
If you want a 'science processor' you should be thinking about a Tesla http://www.nvidia.co.uk/object/tesla_c1060_uk.html.
To an extent it's just because that's what sells papers. There are always kids being stabbed and planes crashing and data being lost. It's just if kids being stabbed becomes a hot topic, you print more stories on stabbed kids.
I really don't think much has changed, but the Mail is keen to point out that the world is ending, and it's probably Johnny Foreigner's fault.
I think that's a little harsh. Most peoples experiences of RAID5 are based around rubbish RAID controllers, which to be honest are possibly in the majority.
RAID5 is a compromise, same as any other RAID level. With a good battery backed controller (as opposed to a bad battery backed controller, or one without) it's reasonably fast and reasonably safe. For some definition of reasonably. And the real winner, is it doesn't waste huge amounts of disk, so you can convince people to use it.
Schneier looks to be wrong about multiple CAs. They don't cause the problem he's talking about.
Without having a global CA:
UKCA can make certs
USCA can make certs
I trust certs from both CAs. I only trust UKCA with certs /C=UK and USCA with /C=US. Both CAs can make certificates for the other country, but that doesn't mean the end user trusts it.
jh
Define lousy decision. If I've got a single batch job that wants all physical memory and then some, and I've got some pesky interactive tools in memory that I'm not currently using, they get paged out. When I come back to use firefox, I'm in for a big wait.
Psst, no it isn't. Google says:
1 US gallon = 0.83267384 Imperial gallons