Cheap and efficient is not actually the point of crypt-currencies, it's about spreading out the pool enough to be able to decentralize trust. If you want cheap and effecient, bring back the $500, $1000, and $10,000 dollar bills.
Google censors application to cover up design deficiency in manufacturer partner's phones.
In reality the generic solution is better, let device manufactures set maximum average power draw and throttle apps accordingly when the phone is not connected to an external power supply.
So essentially it's followed most other industrial commodities, with a bit of fluctuation based on the luxury/jewlery market. It seems that where it actually does well is in the build up to the bubble, and not in the crash. Anyways a more interesting comparison is a comodity index. https://www.marketwatch.com/in...
You can buy stand-alone baseband controllers, which are perfectly fine to incorporate into a build and use. What you can't do is sell a finished product without a battery of tests and approvals. Building and using one is just fine as long as you aren't spoofing anything.
Wind farms keep salaried employees to perform maintenance and inspection, and have a shop/office in the nearest town of reasonable size (5,000+ population), which in most parts of this country is within a 1/2 hour drive of anywhere.
"50 feet in the air" and "small car" is at least half and order of magnitude too low. Try 80-100 meters, and 10-15 tons. each.
However most wind farms are designed so that each individual turbine could be replaced with a somewhat bigger turbine without interfering with other turbines. If you're rebuilding a farm at EOL, you already have the cranes and expertise on-site, so the per-tower decom cost will go down.
Additionally in the contract phase of the project landowners should and often do demand decommissioning funds to be placed in escrow before any construction begins.
To reward creativity? What about the creativity of my friends who changed the design for their own purposes, the one that implemented a cool color scheme, the one that added an electric boost, and the one who scaled the design 5x for the sheer ridiculousness of it? Having a rich, well populated commons gives more people the tools to be creative.
How creative is a single business plan anyways? Why not sell merch related to the design, charge for customization services, sell the first design for a lot of money, sell design services to bike manufacturers that have the tooling and supply chain to beat out most home shops? I'm not convinced copyright is needed for creative endeavors.
And even if it's true you want to reward creativity that has a cost, in terms of lawyers, courts, and keeping ideas and tools from the public domain, and the cost of discouraging amateurs who often start by modifying or sampling works from more developed artists. The terms granted are far too long by any rational analysis. 80% of works achieve over 80% of their revenue in the first decade after date of publication. The life of the author is probably too long, and wildly varies the expected reward by author's age. 10 years, with an option to renew each 10 years for an amount affordably for wildly successful works say, $500, $5000, $50,000, $100,000, $150,000, $200,0000.... with anual cost of living adjustments.
Many jurisdiction treat moral rights separately, the rights of attribution and integrity of the work. You don't need to grant an exclusive license on copying to secure them, and certainly not a grant that lasts over a century.
With raw CPU performance and IPC the A76 should win every time for cpu restricted tasks. Other tasks may be varied more based on the full SOC, which given the A76 has takes up slightly more die area, it's more of a toss-up. Any way you cut it though, it looks like the A76 is very lean and mean modern chip, though it's still not going to compete flat out with an i7, even a mobile one on intensive tasks. Where it's be competitive is on workloads where the Intel processor is having trouble finding a lot of instruction level parallelism. A four-core A76 might be close to a two-core Intel with hyper-threading and clocked down to mobile speeds for many tasks, but I expect Intel has a better branch predictor, rename, and floating point units, which impact real-world performance.
Precisely zero. If I copy your bike, you still have a bike. Granting government enforced monopolies is far from the only, or even best, way of rewarding creativity and innovation.
It's not a matter of dumb or smart, it's a matter of being human. There's only so many things you can pay attention to at once, and at a certain level of machine capability it's just not worth doing anymore for many use cases. And the the choice isn't C++ or silly over to top OO there is a lot of options for memory-safe languages.
NAT doesn't drop unsolicited packets, the statefull firewall does (specifically the INPUT chain of the configured do a default of drop). The firewall then has a rule that also accepts packets related to existing established connections. NAT gives now outbound connection a way to look like they were from a valid public IP, and get routed back to the original source. (This could be a private IP with no other way to route packets to, or public IP that can be routed to normally.) You can also set up a 1:1 NAT that does no filtering whatsoever, just overwrites the source or destination address and forwards it on it's way.
NAT is not inherently a security feature especially if combined with UPnP or unupdated routers or those with default credentials. Most of it's security comes from the fact you have to set up a stateful firewall to do so. Any properly configured home gateway will implement the stateful firewall rules for ipv6.
Most people get their gateway device from the ISP,who could easily export `wc -l/var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases` or similar to find the number of devices on the network. They don't do it because everyone knows that pricing structure is BS, and one of the 5 devices could be doing NAT anyways.
Because of the shortage of IPv4, ISP's are already implementing NAT on their distribution lines, meaning anything behind a home gateway is going to double NAT'd, which is absolute hell to do anything peer to peer, especially if the other peer is also double NAT'd. It's a terrible kludge to avoid the cost many extra routable public addresses, that provides a bit of security as a side effect of it's implementation.
The stuff that's really valuable (metals) doesn't get consumed, and honestly it takes about as much energy to make plastic as you get out of burning it. And you don't need a huge supply chain to do it, you can dispose of waste locally and cleanly. Thow in the sewer solids while you're at it.
Honestly, look at the oil and smell it. If it looks dirty/smells burnt, and the level is starting to drop, then it's time to change it. Checking fluids and tires everytime you fill up is a good idea anyways. Also read the owner's manual and you'll have a pretty good idea of when certain maintenance should be done.
Have the kid hold the flashlight, they might actually learn something useful in the process. At the very least a car isn't some magical black box with four wheels.
The price is posted when you go to order the ride. Taxi's also generally have a unit limit set so that each unit doesn't have too much down time. When demand surges, that's just too bad, all the taxi's are out and you could be waiting hours to get one.
16 of these were Russian "persons" pursuing Russian intelligence goal (sow FUD, amplify existing interval divisions and resentments) , and for the most part outside the jurisdiction of the U.S legal system.Just as (and actually probably to a lessor degree) the US agencies have been influencing politics and culture around the globe for the past 60 years. (especially to fight communism). A few of them were simply charged for making false statements to federal officials, without any real underlying crime, and the rest relate to hiding/obscuring flows of money.
It probably wouldn't have need a big deal to replace that keyboard. The new Macs's keyboards on the other hand are riveted to the frame, and you're looking at over $300 after parts and labor.
This would never happen in Texas. (even if a Texas city had a good rail system)
Cheap and efficient is not actually the point of crypt-currencies, it's about spreading out the pool enough to be able to decentralize trust. If you want cheap and effecient, bring back the $500, $1000, and $10,000 dollar bills.
Google censors application to cover up design deficiency in manufacturer partner's phones.
In reality the generic solution is better, let device manufactures set maximum average power draw and throttle apps accordingly when the phone is not connected to an external power supply.
Cash is too dangerous to handle, and CC/electronic can be reversed up to 90 days after the fact and incur a 2-3% fee.
So essentially it's followed most other industrial commodities, with a bit of fluctuation based on the luxury/jewlery market. It seems that where it actually does well is in the build up to the bubble, and not in the crash. Anyways a more interesting comparison is a comodity index. https://www.marketwatch.com/in...
You can buy stand-alone baseband controllers, which are perfectly fine to incorporate into a build and use. What you can't do is sell a finished product without a battery of tests and approvals. Building and using one is just fine as long as you aren't spoofing anything.
Wind farms keep salaried employees to perform maintenance and inspection, and have a shop/office in the nearest town of reasonable size (5,000+ population), which in most parts of this country is within a 1/2 hour drive of anywhere.
Anybody can file a habeus corpus action for this guy.
"50 feet in the air" and "small car" is at least half and order of magnitude too low. Try 80-100 meters, and 10-15 tons. each.
However most wind farms are designed so that each individual turbine could be replaced with a somewhat bigger turbine without interfering with other turbines. If you're rebuilding a farm at EOL, you already have the cranes and expertise on-site, so the per-tower decom cost will go down.
Additionally in the contract phase of the project landowners should and often do demand decommissioning funds to be placed in escrow before any construction begins.
To reward creativity? What about the creativity of my friends who changed the design for their own purposes, the one that implemented a cool color scheme, the one that added an electric boost, and the one who scaled the design 5x for the sheer ridiculousness of it? Having a rich, well populated commons gives more people the tools to be creative.
How creative is a single business plan anyways? Why not sell merch related to the design, charge for customization services, sell the first design for a lot of money, sell design services to bike manufacturers that have the tooling and supply chain to beat out most home shops? I'm not convinced copyright is needed for creative endeavors.
And even if it's true you want to reward creativity that has a cost, in terms of lawyers, courts, and keeping ideas and tools from the public domain, and the cost of discouraging amateurs who often start by modifying or sampling works from more developed artists. The terms granted are far too long by any rational analysis. 80% of works achieve over 80% of their revenue in the first decade after date of publication. The life of the author is probably too long, and wildly varies the expected reward by author's age. 10 years, with an option to renew each 10 years for an amount affordably for wildly successful works say, $500, $5000, $50,000, $100,000, $150,000, $200,0000.... with anual cost of living adjustments.
Many jurisdiction treat moral rights separately, the rights of attribution and integrity of the work. You don't need to grant an exclusive license on copying to secure them, and certainly not a grant that lasts over a century.
With raw CPU performance and IPC the A76 should win every time for cpu restricted tasks. Other tasks may be varied more based on the full SOC, which given the A76 has takes up slightly more die area, it's more of a toss-up. Any way you cut it though, it looks like the A76 is very lean and mean modern chip, though it's still not going to compete flat out with an i7, even a mobile one on intensive tasks. Where it's be competitive is on workloads where the Intel processor is having trouble finding a lot of instruction level parallelism. A four-core A76 might be close to a two-core Intel with hyper-threading and clocked down to mobile speeds for many tasks, but I expect Intel has a better branch predictor, rename, and floating point units, which impact real-world performance.
Great argument, and brilliant commentary! *Sarcastic slow clap*
Precisely zero. If I copy your bike, you still have a bike. Granting government enforced monopolies is far from the only, or even best, way of rewarding creativity and innovation.
Or at least have a redundant fail-over system. And if you do trust a third party, trust one that has good customer service and up-time gaurantee's.
It's not a matter of dumb or smart, it's a matter of being human. There's only so many things you can pay attention to at once, and at a certain level of machine capability it's just not worth doing anymore for many use cases. And the the choice isn't C++ or silly over to top OO there is a lot of options for memory-safe languages.
Was pretty confident that the suit would fail, too bad it takes $500k to make the court see common sense.
NAT doesn't drop unsolicited packets, the statefull firewall does (specifically the INPUT chain of the configured do a default of drop). The firewall then has a rule that also accepts packets related to existing established connections. NAT gives now outbound connection a way to look like they were from a valid public IP, and get routed back to the original source. (This could be a private IP with no other way to route packets to, or public IP that can be routed to normally.) You can also set up a 1:1 NAT that does no filtering whatsoever, just overwrites the source or destination address and forwards it on it's way.
NAT is not inherently a security feature especially if combined with UPnP or unupdated routers or those with default credentials. Most of it's security comes from the fact you have to set up a stateful firewall to do so. Any properly configured home gateway will implement the stateful firewall rules for ipv6.
Most people get their gateway device from the ISP,who could easily export `wc -l /var/lib/misc/dnsmasq.leases` or similar to find the number of devices on the network. They don't do it because everyone knows that pricing structure is BS, and one of the 5 devices could be doing NAT anyways.
Because of the shortage of IPv4, ISP's are already implementing NAT on their distribution lines, meaning anything behind a home gateway is going to double NAT'd, which is absolute hell to do anything peer to peer, especially if the other peer is also double NAT'd. It's a terrible kludge to avoid the cost many extra routable public addresses, that provides a bit of security as a side effect of it's implementation.
The stuff that's really valuable (metals) doesn't get consumed, and honestly it takes about as much energy to make plastic as you get out of burning it. And you don't need a huge supply chain to do it, you can dispose of waste locally and cleanly. Thow in the sewer solids while you're at it.
Honestly, look at the oil and smell it. If it looks dirty/smells burnt, and the level is starting to drop, then it's time to change it. Checking fluids and tires everytime you fill up is a good idea anyways. Also read the owner's manual and you'll have a pretty good idea of when certain maintenance should be done.
Have the kid hold the flashlight, they might actually learn something useful in the process. At the very least a car isn't some magical black box with four wheels.
The price is posted when you go to order the ride. Taxi's also generally have a unit limit set so that each unit doesn't have too much down time. When demand surges, that's just too bad, all the taxi's are out and you could be waiting hours to get one.
16 of these were Russian "persons" pursuing Russian intelligence goal (sow FUD, amplify existing interval divisions and resentments) , and for the most part outside the jurisdiction of the U.S legal system.Just as (and actually probably to a lessor degree) the US agencies have been influencing politics and culture around the globe for the past 60 years. (especially to fight communism). A few of them were simply charged for making false statements to federal officials, without any real underlying crime, and the rest relate to hiding/obscuring flows of money.
It probably wouldn't have need a big deal to replace that keyboard. The new Macs's keyboards on the other hand are riveted to the frame, and you're looking at over $300 after parts and labor.