I'm not understanding how you'd benefit from processing that's done as soon as possible after the packet arrives.
To me, it sounds like you can just store the data and analyse it on a proper system instead of a very limited FPGA that's oriented towards latency-critical applications.
When you're dealing with space, shaving a millisecond off your processing time doesn't gain you much if you have to wait seconds (or much longer) for signals to reach their destination.
Information was leaked and the whole thing setup to look somewhat legitimate. 3ms is the absolute fastest anything can get from Washington to Chicago, so the information was there before the official announcement.
It won't make the slightest difference if the cable was made by Apple if the charger is faulty.
But not even Apple is crazy enough to ban non-Apple chargers (they'd have to ban their old chargers, too, but that'd be called "innovation", "progress", "revolutionary" and soon...).
van der Waals forces are not the main factor that keeps water molecules together - it's hydrogen bridges and dipole-dipole interactions. In fact, in a water molecule, van der Waals forces are tiny.
You don't! You have to make it yourself, otherwise it could be made to allow the establishment to read your thoughts just when you thought you were safe!
Maemo/MeeGo was destroyed by internal fighting and disagreements. ArsTechnica had an interesting article about that a few months ago. Unfortunately, the N9 destroyed itself by being late and not being properly optimized. Poor developer support was the final straw.
Unfortunately, people tend not to care about those:
Stuff that was left over from their iPods could be reused.
Few people actually understand just how awful iTunes is and thus don't spread the message that it was an absolute requirement.
Fortunately, it's no longer an absolute requirement.
Again, once they realize just how badly that works, they're too busy with inconsequential stuff to care.
Excessive isn't the word I'd use... Protectionist seems more appropriate.
Skeuomorphic interfaces were too popular until recently. Extra stuff is tacked on to existing stuff - much like Symbian did things back in the day.
Tacking on extra stuff instead of reorganizing it makes people more comfortable. That's my experience with Symbian.
By the time people realize that, it's too late - if they care.
I highly doubt a clean install of Windows 8 takes up 41 GB. Have never done one, but it'd be absurd, especially given their efforts towards saving disk space.
Might I add that it is not corrrect to use forces to describe something's resistance - you have to use stress. 16 GN divided by approximately 2330 mm^2 (assuming you're applying the force parallel to its long edge) means approximately 6,9 MPa. It's up to everyone else to guess just what those 6,9 MPa are. Stress at the yield point? Stress at the breaking point? If you're going to bring materials engineering into this, do it right.
You're forgetting cases where people cannot be vaccinated for real medical reasons - those people rely on others being properly vaccinated.
As for my supposed spread of FUD, you misunderstand me: I am merely speaking out against FUD-spreading, not suggesting the article is FUD. If some elements of the media didn't spread FUD, I'm sure the idea that vaccines cause autism would certainly be far less common.
Yeah. Too bad that idiots can spread diseases before they die of their stupidity (Yeah, they're not going to die, but it applies generally). Herd immunity doesn't work if a bunch of idiots decides that vaccines are evil/dangerous/demonstrative of a lack of faith/useless/*insert absurd argument here*.
Let's also thank the media, for creating hysteria where there should be none, and not having the guts to admit they were just spreading FUD after it becomes obvious that their latest sensationalist bullshit is just that.
It's also nice how a "senior pastor" quickly becomes a medical authority for these people. Do they have their doctors fix their plumbing as well?
Great solution, there. Should we legalize Sarin too, so that homicidal dictators don't use the stronger stuff?
I'm not sure the supremely stupid will ever be productive members of society. Stupid people don't just develop out of great kids, now do they?
I'm not understanding how you'd benefit from processing that's done as soon as possible after the packet arrives.
To me, it sounds like you can just store the data and analyse it on a proper system instead of a very limited FPGA that's oriented towards latency-critical applications.
When you're dealing with space, shaving a millisecond off your processing time doesn't gain you much if you have to wait seconds (or much longer) for signals to reach their destination.
Have you considered getting a job writing analogies?
C/C++ does allow for a lot of that.
Reading IOCCC entries illustrates this perfectly.
Information was leaked and the whole thing setup to look somewhat legitimate. 3ms is the absolute fastest anything can get from Washington to Chicago, so the information was there before the official announcement.
I look forward to the moment where I first see someone with a gold iPhone.
I'll make sure to stop, point at them and their phone, and burst out laughing.
By the charger, not the cable.
It won't make the slightest difference if the cable was made by Apple if the charger is faulty.
But not even Apple is crazy enough to ban non-Apple chargers (they'd have to ban their old chargers, too, but that'd be called "innovation", "progress", "revolutionary" and soon...).
Could be an elevated highway...
van der Waals forces are not the main factor that keeps water molecules together - it's hydrogen bridges and dipole-dipole interactions.
In fact, in a water molecule, van der Waals forces are tiny.
4GB is not tiny for a phone. We should try to minimize bloat, not add hardware to pretend there is no bloat.
Anything that would benefit from the move to 64 bits is, most likely, too heavy to be useful on any ARM processor, much less in a phone.
Sure, you can give each app its own chunk of memory addresses with little regard for fragmentation, but that's not an issue on any modern environment.
But, you seem to have examples - care to support your statements with some of them?
They could depreciate stocks of older chips in order to invent a loss and maneuver around some taxes. Dunno if it would fly...
You don't! You have to make it yourself, otherwise it could be made to allow the establishment to read your thoughts just when you thought you were safe!
Maemo/MeeGo was destroyed by internal fighting and disagreements. ArsTechnica had an interesting article about that a few months ago.
Unfortunately, the N9 destroyed itself by being late and not being properly optimized. Poor developer support was the final straw.
Unfortunately, people tend not to care about those:
Stuff that was left over from their iPods could be reused.
Few people actually understand just how awful iTunes is and thus don't spread the message that it was an absolute requirement.
Fortunately, it's no longer an absolute requirement.
Again, once they realize just how badly that works, they're too busy with inconsequential stuff to care.
Excessive isn't the word I'd use... Protectionist seems more appropriate.
Skeuomorphic interfaces were too popular until recently. Extra stuff is tacked on to existing stuff - much like Symbian did things back in the day.
Tacking on extra stuff instead of reorganizing it makes people more comfortable. That's my experience with Symbian.
By the time people realize that, it's too late - if they care.
Horrible audio? That's not Nokia. The one thing every Nokia I've seen has is impeccable call quality.
I highly doubt a clean install of Windows 8 takes up 41 GB. Have never done one, but it'd be absurd, especially given their efforts towards saving disk space.
Might I add that it is not corrrect to use forces to describe something's resistance - you have to use stress. 16 GN divided by approximately 2330 mm^2 (assuming you're applying the force parallel to its long edge) means approximately 6,9 MPa. It's up to everyone else to guess just what those 6,9 MPa are. Stress at the yield point? Stress at the breaking point? If you're going to bring materials engineering into this, do it right.
Two open positions, obviously.
My God... How much time did you waste just scanning books?
You're forgetting cases where people cannot be vaccinated for real medical reasons - those people rely on others being properly vaccinated.
As for my supposed spread of FUD, you misunderstand me: I am merely speaking out against FUD-spreading, not suggesting the article is FUD. If some elements of the media didn't spread FUD, I'm sure the idea that vaccines cause autism would certainly be far less common.
Yeah. Too bad that idiots can spread diseases before they die of their stupidity (Yeah, they're not going to die, but it applies generally).
Herd immunity doesn't work if a bunch of idiots decides that vaccines are evil/dangerous/demonstrative of a lack of faith/useless/*insert absurd argument here*.
Let's also thank the media, for creating hysteria where there should be none, and not having the guts to admit they were just spreading FUD after it becomes obvious that their latest sensationalist bullshit is just that.
It's also nice how a "senior pastor" quickly becomes a medical authority for these people. Do they have their doctors fix their plumbing as well?
A non-profit is generally run like any other business - the difference being that the ultimate goal is not to make money for the shareholders.
Then why don't ducks melt?