If you want a "private youtube" then Plex or Emby(aka MediaBrowser) make far more sense and do everything that you want.
My criticism of OwnCloud, Seafile and all the similar products I have seen in this space is that they have literally been written by web jocks who have no fucking idea about doing this sort of thing properly.
It would be like if Samba stored all your files for your home directory under/var/samba all owned by the samba user and then maintained a database of actual owners and permissions.
I abandoned Owncloud shortly after installing when I discovered like all free software of this type I have evaluated it had no fucking idea about operating on your normal home directory without purchasing the "enterprise" version and then some horrible kludges.
The whole think is clearly written by a bunch of web jocks who have no fucking idea about Unix development and want to reinvent the bloody wheel.
I have a user model and file system that I trust to get the permissions things right. I don't trust some crappy PHP code to do it correctly, and I don't fucking want to have all my files in Owncloud separate from my normal home directory because what's the fucking point in that and then stored under the Apache user in/var. It's a total fucking joke.
I suggest that you get a better filesystem them. IBM's SpectrumScale (aka GPFS) while I admit costs money would take minutes to transverse the metadata of even hundreds of millions of files.
My guess is it depends on the F35. If you happen to be trying to dog fight an F35B then you will as the Argentinians found out in the Falklands War trying to dog fight Harriers that er you can't dog fight an F35B because they will just go into hover. Aka I have someone on my tail, just let me slow right down curtsey of not having a stall speed because I can hove if required and you will fly right passed me at which point your screwed.
Canon Selphy range are compact dye sublimation printers with options of battery backs for portable printing with a range of printing options including PictBridge, off memory cards and USB sticks or direct off the phone using WiFi from iOS and Android.
The thing about MIPS is that it is easy to implement yourself and the patents around unaligned loads which hampered third party implementations where invalidated 15 years ago. Coupled with a complete toolchain and mature Linux ports it is an attractive target for a country developing a CPU that is to be free of external sourcing issues.
The relativity common is around six events like this a year I believe. Or at least that was what the guy who designed/built a bunch of the electronics in the detector said in the Colloquium on Wednesday if I recall correctly.
My understanding is when the upgrades to advanced LIGO (LIGO was an older detector/experiment) are finished they should be able to detect neutron stars coalescing which is believed to be a far more common occurrence. Probably several times a week; again from memory,
Well TNT does not explode instantaneously and 13,000 tons of the stuff is sufficiently large (roughly a 20m cube if my maths is correct and we are assuming liquid TNT with density 1.65g/cm^3) that there would be a roughly 0.003 second delay for the shockwave to propagate though (detonation speed for TNT is 6900m/s) it and set it all off if there was only a single detonation point.
There has been reliable NTFS writing using open source code on platforms other than Windows for years now. It is perhaps not the most performant implementation, but it would in my view make more sense than an ext? driver.
If it the "Secure Enclave" is done correctly it's implemented in hardware and can never ever be changed. If it is currently not done like this one imagines that the iPhone 7 or possibly iPhone 8 dam well will have it implemented in hardware and close the loophole that the FBI are trying to use.
Of course give Apple are going to "fight it" one presumes that it is not currently implemented in hardware, because otherwise they could just turn up to court with some of their engineers who would under oath explain that what the FBI wants is technically impossible.
One imagines that the iPhone7 or more likely the iPhone8, as one suspects the iPhone7 design is too far advanced to add this will come with such a feature.
If you go unabridged that could be less than one audio book. For example Lord of the Rings is just under 51 hours and War and Peace is around 61 hours. Bleak House is 35-37 hours depending on narrator. Most of the Game of Thrones books are over 35 hours, so it's not just classics.
Though I would concede that the average audio book is in the region of 15 hours.
Don't know about you but anything bigger than 2GB is pretty useless. All I use a USB flash drive for is as the boot device for a Linux server that is doing software RAID. Simplifies disk replacement enormously. I guess you might find use for something bigger in a vSphere server or similar, though most servers come with SD card slots (redundant as well) these days.
For everything else there is a network, and even for install and rescue purposes the network is better than a USB drive. I guess somewhere once you need to do an install from a USB drive or DVD to get your install server going, but once you have then why go back to fiddling with drives...
Really, a free download of handbrake and an Amazon Fire 7" tablet with a 64Gb microSD card makes far more sense than messing about with physical DVD's. Apart from anything else small kids ruin physical DVD's.
That is highly dependant on your country of residence. I have travelled to the USA and the TV is frankly appalling. On the other hand back her in the UK there is high quality broadcast TV every week.
It is also not just the BBC broadcasting quality material either, the main commercial terrestrial broadcasters also have high quality content too. I would though argue this is because they can't do too much rubbish because they would loose out to the BBC. Effectively the BBC keeps them honest.
What's a real driver? Any Porsche that is being raced will have a "flappy paddle" gearbox, because otherwise you will be left for dead. Sure there is crowd of Luddite Porsche owners that want a full manual gearbox. However I would be surprised if "flappy paddle" gearboxes where not at least an option on every current Porsche model.
There is also the NATO radar logs which prove that the plane entered Turkish air space. There is not a hope in hell that Turkey would have had full NATO backing for their actions if that data did not exist.
Unfortunately the great hopes of 25 years ago are all coming crashing down. Russian's and in particular Putin are suffering from what I call "Pershing Syndrome", that is they don't believe they lost the cold war and we will have to do it all over again.
Except he is using GPS as a very precise 10MHz signal, not a clock. The private rubidium clock (about 1500USD from memory) will provide that very nicely.
Personally if I was running an experiment that required that sort of precision then the private highly accurate frequency source is going to be fairly small beer in the total cost of the experiment and freezes you from the trouble of getting the GPS signal into your lab, which for most labs I know is going to be a right pain in the backside because GPS signals don't extend indoors. Further more is there is not chance that some random event won't knock it out for a few seconds and potentially ruin your experiment.
I guess the point is that until recently using GPS was a valid way to get a very high precision reference frequency, though here in the UK I would suggest that using the BBC Radio 4 LW signal might have been a better idea. The carrier frequency is controlled by a rubidium atomic frequency standard for the express purpose of enabling it to be used as an used as an off-air frequency standard. However time and tide move on and now it is not such a valid choice as it was previously.
It's 2016 so I would say using GPS to generate reference signals in a lab is a daft idea. Far more sensible to use a chip scale rubidium atomic clock and not depend on some external reference signal that might go away at any time.
If you want a "private youtube" then Plex or Emby(aka MediaBrowser) make far more sense and do everything that you want.
My criticism of OwnCloud, Seafile and all the similar products I have seen in this space is that they have literally been written by web jocks who have no fucking idea about doing this sort of thing properly.
It would be like if Samba stored all your files for your home directory under /var/samba all owned by the samba user and then maintained a database of actual owners and permissions.
The whole space is a complete and total fuckup.
I abandoned Owncloud shortly after installing when I discovered like all free software of this type I have evaluated it had no fucking idea about operating on your normal home directory without purchasing the "enterprise" version and then some horrible kludges.
The whole think is clearly written by a bunch of web jocks who have no fucking idea about Unix development and want to reinvent the bloody wheel.
I have a user model and file system that I trust to get the permissions things right. I don't trust some crappy PHP code to do it correctly, and I don't fucking want to have all my files in Owncloud separate from my normal home directory because what's the fucking point in that and then stored under the Apache user in /var. It's a total fucking joke.
I suggest that you get a better filesystem them. IBM's SpectrumScale (aka GPFS) while I admit costs money would take minutes to transverse the metadata of even hundreds of millions of files.
My guess is it depends on the F35. If you happen to be trying to dog fight an F35B then you will as the Argentinians found out in the Falklands War trying to dog fight Harriers that er you can't dog fight an F35B because they will just go into hover. Aka I have someone on my tail, just let me slow right down curtsey of not having a stall speed because I can hove if required and you will fly right passed me at which point your screwed.
Canon Selphy range are compact dye sublimation printers with options of battery backs for portable printing with a range of printing options including PictBridge, off memory cards and USB sticks or direct off the phone using WiFi from iOS and Android.
The thing about MIPS is that it is easy to implement yourself and the patents around unaligned loads which hampered third party implementations where invalidated 15 years ago. Coupled with a complete toolchain and mature Linux ports it is an attractive target for a country developing a CPU that is to be free of external sourcing issues.
The relativity common is around six events like this a year I believe. Or at least that was what the guy who designed/built a bunch of the electronics in the detector said in the Colloquium on Wednesday if I recall correctly.
My understanding is when the upgrades to advanced LIGO (LIGO was an older detector/experiment) are finished they should be able to detect neutron stars coalescing which is believed to be a far more common occurrence. Probably several times a week; again from memory,
Well TNT does not explode instantaneously and 13,000 tons of the stuff is sufficiently large (roughly a 20m cube if my maths is correct and we are assuming liquid TNT with density 1.65g/cm^3) that there would be a roughly 0.003 second delay for the shockwave to propagate though (detonation speed for TNT is 6900m/s) it and set it all off if there was only a single detonation point.
There has been reliable NTFS writing using open source code on platforms other than Windows for years now. It is perhaps not the most performant implementation, but it would in my view make more sense than an ext? driver.
If it the "Secure Enclave" is done correctly it's implemented in hardware and can never ever be changed. If it is currently not done like this one imagines that the iPhone 7 or possibly iPhone 8 dam well will have it implemented in hardware and close the loophole that the FBI are trying to use.
Of course give Apple are going to "fight it" one presumes that it is not currently implemented in hardware, because otherwise they could just turn up to court with some of their engineers who would under oath explain that what the FBI wants is technically impossible.
One imagines that the iPhone7 or more likely the iPhone8, as one suspects the iPhone7 design is too far advanced to add this will come with such a feature.
Quite what the FBI are thinking I don't know.
If you go unabridged that could be less than one audio book. For example Lord of the Rings is just under 51 hours and War and Peace is around 61 hours. Bleak House is 35-37 hours depending on narrator. Most of the Game of Thrones books are over 35 hours, so it's not just classics.
Though I would concede that the average audio book is in the region of 15 hours.
Don't know about you but anything bigger than 2GB is pretty useless. All I use a USB flash drive for is as the boot device for a Linux server that is doing software RAID. Simplifies disk replacement enormously. I guess you might find use for something bigger in a vSphere server or similar, though most servers come with SD card slots (redundant as well) these days.
For everything else there is a network, and even for install and rescue purposes the network is better than a USB drive. I guess somewhere once you need to do an install from a USB drive or DVD to get your install server going, but once you have then why go back to fiddling with drives...
MakeMKV will rip anything to disk, blueray and dvd included. Handrake will then happily encode your mkv to the format of your choice.
Really, a free download of handbrake and an Amazon Fire 7" tablet with a 64Gb microSD card makes far more sense than messing about with physical DVD's. Apart from anything else small kids ruin physical DVD's.
That is highly dependant on your country of residence. I have travelled to the USA and the TV is frankly appalling. On the other hand back her in the UK there is high quality broadcast TV every week.
It is also not just the BBC broadcasting quality material either, the main commercial terrestrial broadcasters also have high quality content too. I would though argue this is because they can't do too much rubbish because they would loose out to the BBC. Effectively the BBC keeps them honest.
What's a real driver? Any Porsche that is being raced will have a "flappy paddle" gearbox, because otherwise you will be left for dead. Sure there is crowd of Luddite Porsche owners that want a full manual gearbox. However I would be surprised if "flappy paddle" gearboxes where not at least an option on every current Porsche model.
I point you to optar
http://ronja.twibright.com/opt...
One might argue that if ones house burnt down then ones insurance can pay for the cost of recovering from Glacier.
Why bother with just the wheel, it is not uncommon to throw the entire bike away
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
I would add especially when they hoard those profits overseas and don't pay taxes on them.
There is also the NATO radar logs which prove that the plane entered Turkish air space. There is not a hope in hell that Turkey would have had full NATO backing for their actions if that data did not exist.
Unfortunately the great hopes of 25 years ago are all coming crashing down. Russian's and in particular Putin are suffering from what I call "Pershing Syndrome", that is they don't believe they lost the cold war and we will have to do it all over again.
Except he is using GPS as a very precise 10MHz signal, not a clock. The private rubidium clock (about 1500USD from memory) will provide that very nicely.
Personally if I was running an experiment that required that sort of precision then the private highly accurate frequency source is going to be fairly small beer in the total cost of the experiment and freezes you from the trouble of getting the GPS signal into your lab, which for most labs I know is going to be a right pain in the backside because GPS signals don't extend indoors. Further more is there is not chance that some random event won't knock it out for a few seconds and potentially ruin your experiment.
I guess the point is that until recently using GPS was a valid way to get a very high precision reference frequency, though here in the UK I would suggest that using the BBC Radio 4 LW signal might have been a better idea. The carrier frequency is controlled by a rubidium atomic frequency standard for the express purpose of enabling it to be used as an used as an off-air frequency standard. However time and tide move on and now it is not such a valid choice as it was previously.
It's 2016 so I would say using GPS to generate reference signals in a lab is a daft idea. Far more sensible to use a chip scale rubidium atomic clock and not depend on some external reference signal that might go away at any time.
Yeah but that is not going to help when a storm blows a tree over and crushes the car and it's occupants. Even if car is stationary in the garage.