But not for the reason you might think. I'm really not that into 3D games, however full screen co-op, "dual play" or something, is a really great idea. I just don't like split-screen gaming and I wouldn't mind wearing glasses to achieve it, if needed. The drawback of course is frame rate, it should be (game_rate/2).
Anyway never did and I'm not sad because of it.
but I am not a neurologist. I started medical training (med school in 2004) an dI'm in practice today. I have long been suspicious that most dementias that we are calling "Alzheimer's" dementia are really multi-infarct/vascular dementia from mini-stroke/strokes/atherosclerosis etc.... Remember the "gold standard" in a practical sense to diagnose Alzheimer's demential is post-mortem brain pathology examination.
I would tend to agree with you. This also falls into a "no-brainer" type of law. I cannot reasonably imagine a legitimate use for caller-ID spoofing (outside of maybe the law).
I'm a doctor - MD type. I can't take a pen or a lunch without being accused of having a terrible bias and being "on the take" with "big Pharma" but politicians can literally take tens or even hundreds of thousands actual US dollars (maybe millions) then write (or have written for them) clearly bribed legislation and this is normal. Hmmmm.....
Well, that is one very cynical view. Of course they might have reasons that benefit users. The fact that they offer an adapter rather dispels this theory. Get good Bluetooth headphones and you won't want to go back. Hint: x.
Not only offer but include it in the box for "free". Apple has been known to pull of some "interesting" things with adapters before like, you need an adapter, buy it. In this case, I was pretty surprised (pleasantly) that they include the adapter.
I had the honor and privilege of meeting Dr. Zewail and attending a private lecture while at university. His daughter was my upper division biochemistry professor and he was kind enough to drop in and give us a lecture while he was visiting. He was a brilliant thinker not just in the world of femto-spectroscopy, but overall. He was approachable and witty. He will be missed as a father, a fellow human and for his contributions to the scientific world.
First we had 720p and 1080p. Now we have 4k and 8k instead of 2160p and 4320p. Is it just marketing. I am with you in that we should start calling 1080p - 2k
I suspect it is just marketing.
I can see now why Nintendo has been so far hesitant to allow their franchises (old games specifically) to be ported to iOS or Android. There is a lot of money on the table and I think they know this. So I think we will see this portable NX feature a fair amount of retro gaming. This, in addition to the mini-Nintendo they are about to release. Except I can't imagine anyone carrying one around around in addition to their smartphone.
In terms of energy efficiency, it is smart. The rate at which your house warms and cools, especially as a function of outside temperature, is a much better algorithm for controlling a heating and cooling system. However, I admit even as a gadget geek with some superfluous income it just isn't $250 cool, to me. Purely a values thing. I'd definitely be in for $150, maybe at $200. Price point is just off for what it does.
There have been several studies to date transplanting gut flora from "skinny" rats and mice into "obese" rats and mice resulting in weight loss with the same diet composition. They have also showed the reverse to be true.
Furthermore there seems to be some evidence that sugar-alcohols and artificial sweeteners may be better food for the growth of bacteria that favors an obese phenotype.
Also the the realization that people are not built to nor adhere here the engineering specifications of an airplane. Every patient's anatomy, symptoms, disease processes etc..are relatively unique to them. There are several thing that work for checklists, but they aren't going to save the day.
Also, in some ways we are spoiled by modern medicine - what exactly is "routine" heart surgery. You have 1 pump in a system that has no backup or redundancy. How is altering that or taking it offline for repairs ever routine?
Medical errors are real. They are often not malignant or obvious at the time, hindsight is 20/20. In addition patients are older, sicker, fatter, and with more co-morbidities all while living longer with these chronic serious diseases then ever before.
Definitely this - it stems from hiring PHBs that come from the "business world" to manage engineers rather then hiring managers from the ranks of engineers.
Because obviously you need to have an MBA to be a good manager.
This is a great point. More importantly, I would suggest a vast majority have no idea what "electromagnetic radiation" is and are ignorant to the fact that they are bathed in it, in this part of the spectrum - 2300-2400 MHz everywhere they go.
For the record - the president vetoes. The Congress passes bills or not. Trump and any president can submit whatever bills/ideas/threats to the Congress they want. Then, they can go to committee (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be voted on in committee (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be debated in Congress (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be voted on in Congress (after significant or no modification) or not.
So yeah, it is very hard to get things done in Congress.
I think what Steve Jobs was saying was (he thought) people wanted to own their music (so no DRM, but initially it was a requirement post-Napster internet) and not stream it. Music is (was) a type of identity but more people now seem to want to stream and not buy so much. I have 2 teens (you mileage may vary) - my daughter gets most of her music from spotify, my son listens to entire albums on youtube. They have no interest in my mp3 collection.
I would imagine there is so much free steaming (pandora, spotify, youtube) many people now see music as ever present and free. Not sure how that's going to change.
But not for the reason you might think. I'm really not that into 3D games, however full screen co-op, "dual play" or something, is a really great idea. I just don't like split-screen gaming and I wouldn't mind wearing glasses to achieve it, if needed. The drawback of course is frame rate, it should be (game_rate/2). Anyway never did and I'm not sad because of it.
but I am not a neurologist. I started medical training (med school in 2004) an dI'm in practice today. I have long been suspicious that most dementias that we are calling "Alzheimer's" dementia are really multi-infarct/vascular dementia from mini-stroke/strokes/atherosclerosis etc.... Remember the "gold standard" in a practical sense to diagnose Alzheimer's demential is post-mortem brain pathology examination.
I would tend to agree with you. This also falls into a "no-brainer" type of law. I cannot reasonably imagine a legitimate use for caller-ID spoofing (outside of maybe the law).
Pretty much sums up this case. Please don't put long, thin phones in your (back, especially) pocket.
I'm a doctor - MD type. I can't take a pen or a lunch without being accused of having a terrible bias and being "on the take" with "big Pharma" but politicians can literally take tens or even hundreds of thousands actual US dollars (maybe millions) then write (or have written for them) clearly bribed legislation and this is normal. Hmmmm.....
Well, that is one very cynical view. Of course they might have reasons that benefit users. The fact that they offer an adapter rather dispels this theory. Get good Bluetooth headphones and you won't want to go back. Hint: x.
Not only offer but include it in the box for "free". Apple has been known to pull of some "interesting" things with adapters before like, you need an adapter, buy it. In this case, I was pretty surprised (pleasantly) that they include the adapter.
My familiarity with 86 come from the restaurant industry - if something is unavailable (special, menu item etc... it is 86'd or 86 the quiche etc...)
The adapter is free in the box with the phone.
I had the honor and privilege of meeting Dr. Zewail and attending a private lecture while at university. His daughter was my upper division biochemistry professor and he was kind enough to drop in and give us a lecture while he was visiting. He was a brilliant thinker not just in the world of femto-spectroscopy, but overall. He was approachable and witty. He will be missed as a father, a fellow human and for his contributions to the scientific world.
....and what OP is saying is that the wealth in those countries is very concentrated so GDP is a poor benchmark.
First we had 720p and 1080p. Now we have 4k and 8k instead of 2160p and 4320p. Is it just marketing. I am with you in that we should start calling 1080p - 2k I suspect it is just marketing.
I can see now why Nintendo has been so far hesitant to allow their franchises (old games specifically) to be ported to iOS or Android. There is a lot of money on the table and I think they know this. So I think we will see this portable NX feature a fair amount of retro gaming. This, in addition to the mini-Nintendo they are about to release. Except I can't imagine anyone carrying one around around in addition to their smartphone.
In terms of energy efficiency, it is smart. The rate at which your house warms and cools, especially as a function of outside temperature, is a much better algorithm for controlling a heating and cooling system. However, I admit even as a gadget geek with some superfluous income it just isn't $250 cool, to me. Purely a values thing. I'd definitely be in for $150, maybe at $200. Price point is just off for what it does.
Maybe. Maybe not:
http://science.sciencemag.org/...
There have been several studies to date transplanting gut flora from "skinny" rats and mice into "obese" rats and mice resulting in weight loss with the same diet composition. They have also showed the reverse to be true.
Furthermore there seems to be some evidence that sugar-alcohols and artificial sweeteners may be better food for the growth of bacteria that favors an obese phenotype.
http://www.omicsonline.org/bac... http://www.scientificamerican.... http://www.nature.com/nature/j... http://www.nature.com/news/sug...
(FWIW - I am a doctor (MD) but I am not an endocrinologist/obesity researcher)
A modern day modest proposal. I like it.
Also the the realization that people are not built to nor adhere here the engineering specifications of an airplane. Every patient's anatomy, symptoms, disease processes etc..are relatively unique to them. There are several thing that work for checklists, but they aren't going to save the day.
Also, in some ways we are spoiled by modern medicine - what exactly is "routine" heart surgery. You have 1 pump in a system that has no backup or redundancy. How is altering that or taking it offline for repairs ever routine?
Medical errors are real. They are often not malignant or obvious at the time, hindsight is 20/20. In addition patients are older, sicker, fatter, and with more co-morbidities all while living longer with these chronic serious diseases then ever before.
It is a recipe for this.
FWIW I think it was an iPhone 5c running iOS 9.
I'm with you fuzzy..when life serves you corium you have to make coriumade.
Definitely this - it stems from hiring PHBs that come from the "business world" to manage engineers rather then hiring managers from the ranks of engineers. Because obviously you need to have an MBA to be a good manager.
In addition the 5GHz spectrum is equally as crowded. (After I RTF article)
This is a great point. More importantly, I would suggest a vast majority have no idea what "electromagnetic radiation" is and are ignorant to the fact that they are bathed in it, in this part of the spectrum - 2300-2400 MHz everywhere they go.
Yeah, well, at least fucking Slashdot still allows fucking comments. Can you imagine Slashdot without all our fucking insightful comments?
+1 Insightful
For the record - the president vetoes. The Congress passes bills or not. Trump and any president can submit whatever bills/ideas/threats to the Congress they want. Then, they can go to committee (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be voted on in committee (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be debated in Congress (after significant or no modification) or not, they can be voted on in Congress (after significant or no modification) or not.
So yeah, it is very hard to get things done in Congress.
But it is one of the most reasonable things that he has said recently.
I think what Steve Jobs was saying was (he thought) people wanted to own their music (so no DRM, but initially it was a requirement post-Napster internet) and not stream it. Music is (was) a type of identity but more people now seem to want to stream and not buy so much. I have 2 teens (you mileage may vary) - my daughter gets most of her music from spotify, my son listens to entire albums on youtube. They have no interest in my mp3 collection. I would imagine there is so much free steaming (pandora, spotify, youtube) many people now see music as ever present and free. Not sure how that's going to change.