I do not think there is a safe way to do that in regards to any storage array system, besides setting up the two arrays in parallel and copying the data.
ZFS will allow you to migrate up to larger drives, but I believe it has to be the same number of drives and it is still fairly risky (requiring you to degrade the array for a rather lengthy period).
I think the updates to ZFS are more impressive. The addition of LZ4 compression (50-80% faster), SSD TRIM support and the new NOP-write that reduces the need to write to compressed disks will all mean commodity hardware SANs running FreeBSD will be able to give the big boys a run for their money.
So, better compression, SSD speed-up and less need to write to changed files, means there will be a huge performance increase.
By horizontal, you mean down right? As in making it worse? As in reducing the features to save money? As in user figures declining? As Yahoo is going to Hell?
I like the idea of an all-in-one computer, but making them look like a monitor (with a stand and such) is a waste of the form factor.
Units that are designed to resemble tablets, with no stand or a retractable stand, can be used in more variety than units like this Dell be advertised by the article.
Take a look at Lenovo's Horizon 27 inch or Sony's Vaio Tap 20.
Both can be laid flat, the Lenovo unit can be angled well by it's strong spring stand from 90 degrees down to 5 degrees of the desk making it comfortable to lean over and use to draw. It also comes with a suite of games that can be played while it's flat, from board games to billiards or air hockey.
I think all-in-ones should be going this direction. The instances where they will be used typically in this form factor will not require their screen site to get larger and their performance is easily enough to handle almost anything typical these days, so the disadvantage of not being able upgrade individual pieces of the hardware (screen or internals) is moot.
For the amount of money you pay for some college classes and the simple fact that you usually use the same software across several classes, I do not understand why the universities and colleges just don't comp the software to the students using a similar rental model from the software vendors for the duration of the classes.
Even in an academic setting, the rental model is more expensive than the academic versions previously. If Adobe upgraded their software every two years, as they had for a long time, then you'd be paying about $150 a year.
Renting at $20 a month is $240 a year, so students are actually getting screwed too.
Corporations are incredibly pissed from what I have seen personally and have the same sentiment as OP.
... for every time someone used a Ballmer chair joke in the millions of comments over thousands of websites that are announcing his retirement, I could buy Microsoft and open source all of their products.
What exactly has astrophysics and geophysics predicted accurately?
All three fields of science seem to be more interested in creating a fancy narrative (Big Bang, AWG, Geochronology) but in reality rely on too much indirect evidence.
And since they all rely on indirect evidence, anyone reading through it quickly realize the majority of it is inductive in origin not deductive.
From the series of photos and shape of the dune, it seems like the set itself altered the wind pattern and caused the very same dune that is going to engulf it?
All the more reason that public, non-military projects like this should have everything open sourced.
Had the hardware and software platforms both been open sourced and available to the public, they would have had a lot more hands and eyes helping to correct these issues.
The only way we're going to get off this planet is with mutual cooperation, and I think that should start between the public sector and..well..the public.
Copy/pasted summary from single source, source has popups harassing for email address and tons of social media buttons, and source adds nothing interesting to the discussion.
Editors/moderators haven't had their coffee today?
The problem being that most patients are most likely not being diagnosed accurately and thus being medicated inappropriately or over-medicated instead of another proper treatment, which might be why the Society decided to reverse course.
So, with the choice of a majority being mis-diagnosed versus a minority correctly diagnosed, the less harmful answer is to reduce the number of diagnosis being done.
And more importantly, limit diagnose under strict situations and conditions, which looks like what they wish to promote.
Had you fully qualified your statement with "directly caused by emitted radiation", then you would have been 100% correct.
You are forgetting that some cell phones have an infrared emitter which can be used as a television remote, that could certainly get you injured or killed in some households.
Everyone is comparing the costs to a NEW full license of the suites or programs, but that's only a small half of the story. Those of us that have already made the investment of a full copy and can upgrade, these changes are a complete RIP OFF.
The cost of upgrading CS5.5 Premium Design suite to CS6 is $375. Cost of Creative Cloud? $50 a month, $600 a year.
We use to only upgrade Adobe suites every 2-3 years, at $375 a pop. Now for the same thing, we must pay $1200-1800 over those two to three years?
That's an increase of 200-250% depending on your suite.
So, you're saying that instead of an electron falling into a hole causing a photon to be given off, the electrons are all huddled together elsewhere talking about the last episode of Big Bang Theory?
They have had the data since 2008.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Secure_Flight
Every person's name that has flown, what airline, what flight, gender, etc.
ALL OF IT FOR ALMOST FIVE YEARS.
And have they caught anyone using it? Not that I've seen.
I do not think there is a safe way to do that in regards to any storage array system, besides setting up the two arrays in parallel and copying the data.
ZFS will allow you to migrate up to larger drives, but I believe it has to be the same number of drives and it is still fairly risky (requiring you to degrade the array for a rather lengthy period).
Here's a blog explaining some.
https://www.dan.me.uk/blog/2012/11/14/increase-capacity-of-freebsd-zfs-array-by-replacing-disks/
I think you can also use the mirror capabilities to migrate to a newer set of drives, but I have not seen anyone explain the process well.
I think the updates to ZFS are more impressive. The addition of LZ4 compression (50-80% faster), SSD TRIM support and the new NOP-write that reduces the need to write to compressed disks will all mean commodity hardware SANs running FreeBSD will be able to give the big boys a run for their money.
So, better compression, SSD speed-up and less need to write to changed files, means there will be a huge performance increase.
Google pushed all of it's searches to SSL, thus encrypted, as a way to supposedly protect our searches from other's eyes.
But doesn't doing our searching over encryption also put us into the situation where the NSA will record it "to be decrypted later"?
Was Google one of the companies that shared keys or added a backdoor?
By horizontal, you mean down right? As in making it worse? As in reducing the features to save money? As in user figures declining? As Yahoo is going to Hell?
The answer is zero, right?
I'm just checking because you provided no multiple choices and God forbid I use my brain.
I like the idea of an all-in-one computer, but making them look like a monitor (with a stand and such) is a waste of the form factor.
Units that are designed to resemble tablets, with no stand or a retractable stand, can be used in more variety than units like this Dell be advertised by the article.
Take a look at Lenovo's Horizon 27 inch or Sony's Vaio Tap 20.
http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/ideacentre-horizon-27-review-all-in-one,3564.html
http://store.sony.com/p/Sony-Desktop,-20-inch,-Tap-20,-VAIO-Touch,-VAIO-Desktop,-Core-i5,-Windows-8,-3rd-gen-Intel,-touch-display,-all-in-one,-touchscreen/en/p/SVJ20217CXW
Both can be laid flat, the Lenovo unit can be angled well by it's strong spring stand from 90 degrees down to 5 degrees of the desk making it comfortable to lean over and use to draw. It also comes with a suite of games that can be played while it's flat, from board games to billiards or air hockey.
I think all-in-ones should be going this direction. The instances where they will be used typically in this form factor will not require their screen site to get larger and their performance is easily enough to handle almost anything typical these days, so the disadvantage of not being able upgrade individual pieces of the hardware (screen or internals) is moot.
For the amount of money you pay for some college classes and the simple fact that you usually use the same software across several classes, I do not understand why the universities and colleges just don't comp the software to the students using a similar rental model from the software vendors for the duration of the classes.
Even in an academic setting, the rental model is more expensive than the academic versions previously. If Adobe upgraded their software every two years, as they had for a long time, then you'd be paying about $150 a year.
Renting at $20 a month is $240 a year, so students are actually getting screwed too.
Corporations are incredibly pissed from what I have seen personally and have the same sentiment as OP.
... for every time someone used a Ballmer chair joke in the millions of comments over thousands of websites that are announcing his retirement, I could buy Microsoft and open source all of their products.
They have the cattle chutes, too. They're called security checkpoints. Most of these companies have them and some even search you on your way out.
What exactly has astrophysics and geophysics predicted accurately?
All three fields of science seem to be more interested in creating a fancy narrative (Big Bang, AWG, Geochronology) but in reality rely on too much indirect evidence.
And since they all rely on indirect evidence, anyone reading through it quickly realize the majority of it is inductive in origin not deductive.
Autodesk has a service already available that does what the Disney does, it's called Recap.
http://usa.autodesk.com/adsk/servlet/pc/index?id=21350337&siteID=123112
They have a cloud service that can make full 3D models from photos.
From the series of photos and shape of the dune, it seems like the set itself altered the wind pattern and caused the very same dune that is going to engulf it?
All the more reason that public, non-military projects like this should have everything open sourced.
Had the hardware and software platforms both been open sourced and available to the public, they would have had a lot more hands and eyes helping to correct these issues.
The only way we're going to get off this planet is with mutual cooperation, and I think that should start between the public sector and..well..the public.
Should also be mentioned that the regular testing of the Detroit system stopped when Motorola began restructuring for the Google purchase.
So, I blame Google.
First Reader, now Detroit's EMS.
Nay, Windows 8.1! (fake cheers from paid shills)
Copy/pasted summary from single source, source has popups harassing for email address and tons of social media buttons, and source adds nothing interesting to the discussion.
Editors/moderators haven't had their coffee today?
Babies. Ooooh yeah!
Wish I could mod you funny. Damn this random, one-time-five-points-every-two-years, mod system.
The problem being that most patients are most likely not being diagnosed accurately and thus being medicated inappropriately or over-medicated instead of another proper treatment, which might be why the Society decided to reverse course. So, with the choice of a majority being mis-diagnosed versus a minority correctly diagnosed, the less harmful answer is to reduce the number of diagnosis being done. And more importantly, limit diagnose under strict situations and conditions, which looks like what they wish to promote.
Had you fully qualified your statement with "directly caused by emitted radiation", then you would have been 100% correct.
You are forgetting that some cell phones have an infrared emitter which can be used as a television remote, that could certainly get you injured or killed in some households.
Everyone is comparing the costs to a NEW full license of the suites or programs, but that's only a small half of the story. Those of us that have already made the investment of a full copy and can upgrade, these changes are a complete RIP OFF.
The cost of upgrading CS5.5 Premium Design suite to CS6 is $375. Cost of Creative Cloud? $50 a month, $600 a year.
We use to only upgrade Adobe suites every 2-3 years, at $375 a pop. Now for the same thing, we must pay $1200-1800 over those two to three years?
That's an increase of 200-250% depending on your suite.
Why is no one bringing this up?
It's a money grab. Imagine you can upgrade every 2 years for $375 (cost from CS5.5 to 6) or spend $600 a year on Creative Cloud.
That's an incredible jump in pricing, from $375 to $1200.
I doubt corporations are going to put up with this.
So, you're saying that instead of an electron falling into a hole causing a photon to be given off, the electrons are all huddled together elsewhere talking about the last episode of Big Bang Theory?
I assume since they are covered in radioactive anti-bodies, that they cannot reproduce and would die eventually from the radiation exposure.
And I highly doubt they would inject more than a safe limit into you if they did use these for treatment based on your level of kidney function.
Probably ending up using a whole lot less radiation then the levels that nuked you.