Congress finally admitting they don't know wtf they're doing when it comes to technology & the internet. So in bureaucratic fashion they pass the problem on to their successor.
Not sure if I want any of Canadian Common Sense to be honest.
Then again EVERYBODY should have implemented something like this past the very first copyright lawsuit where the kid got slammed for 6-7 figures, so about a decade later glad to see a single country do it, now about buying a server in Canada...:)
The key word is right in the summary "pressure". Think of how MS packages windows for euro use, yep the door swings both ways. They didn't have to ban U.S. customers, but rather than dealing with the U.S. , they chose to do so, just like google, MS, and a plethora of other companies have in the past. This is hardly news.
Load balancing & Fail over serve two entirely different purposes. What happens when your load balancer has nowhere to balance to (we're talking about streaming HD media after all), or something in the cluster fails?
Not a whole lot of places have instant fail-over, so it's going to be interesting to see who takes advantage of this.
I think this is one of those cases where they meant to release the Wii Mini a while ago, but it got internally delayed for whatever reason, so they're releasing it to a scraps market. Next gen consoles may be out by next Christmas already.
Yep, GIT has stuff like blame, committed by, & change control, bu then again so does just about any modern versioning system. OP probably doesn't write code based on comment and lack of detail.
:( You need about 5 pages of material to learn how to do 90% of stuff in GIT, it gets more complicated in bigger environments, but a lot of it is rinse & repeat. The best I've done with GIT is pair it up with NANT/CruiseControl.NET to get a free & extremely effective build server going. Most of the setup was in the latter two technologies referencing dev & prod environments. A 456 page book about this straight forward of a technology seems a bit excessive. Then again 456 pages is probably an introduction on how to not delete your code with tfs.
x86 can run pretty quiet too. Not sure why anybody would ever build anything with ARM without stepping up to a solder gun, which is more in the realm of engineering anyways...
At least a few key PC players found out from SemiAccurate a few months ago, and they were rather incredulous about the news.
That's their source on this, so it's basically pure speculation off of an off-handed source, brilliant. As a manufacturer and engineering firm, Intel probably has 100s of projects in the pipe at any given time doesn't mean they're about to kill the PC lol. Also builders (PC enthusiasts in TFA) are a bit more resourceful than TFA's I've-never-built-a-pc-in-my-life writer gives credit for.
"Some proposals could permit governments to censor legitimate speech - or even allow them to cut off internet access.
How is this different from the current internet?
"Other proposals would require services like YouTube, Facebook, and Skype to pay new tolls in order to reach people across borders. This could limit access to information - particularly in emerging markets."
Countries shouldn't be relying on international call rates either, the whole system is a racket, now they want to expand it.
And the one bright light...
It has been claimed some countries will try to wrest oversight of the net's technical specifications and domain name system from US bodies to an international organisation.
Anything on U.S. soil is subject to U.S. law, and that hasn't always resulted in the best of scenarios, especially with DNS. The U.S. does own the physical infrastructure for these systems, so chances of us accepting the proposition are probably slim to none, but then again it may be for the best depending on what your intentions are... The U.S. is overzealous on governing the internet, an international organization given the complexity of international law and bureaucracy in general would probably be sluggish and inefficient creating tons of loopholes and work arounds.
Well said... and you're probably right, the TV market looks like Sony vs. Samsung right now, with Panasonic holding down plasmas, but with LED... Sharp had Aquos running good for a while, decent picture, good price, and way thinner than it's counter parts, but it's been almost a decade since those days, not much has changed with Sharp, Sony & Samsung have features that Sharp doesn't. Sharp now sits somewhere between budget and high end tvs, which doesn't have much of a market. Also, Samsung & Sony have way more product lines & some of those product lines integrate with each other (ex. Galaxy Tab controlling your TV), not so with Sharp. I think it's safe to say they've fallen behind the tech curve and the times. When I was buying a TV & I know a few things about them some may say, I never even considered Sharp, I wound up going with Sony on a deal.
I blame TV & the Internet... speaking of which, there's some pretty good cat videos on this internet thing.
Seriously thought, body and mind require a MASSIVE amount of time to train together and ya people don't f' w you after. In fact, in pro sports a lot of people have made the hall of fame for their smarts on the field that lead to numbers.
Also, not all families are created equal, you seem to have been raised by an exceptional one.
Now you can start lifting weights too, no excuses!
Based on your logic however, stoves killed people in the past I'm sure, don't use stoves! (everything requires at least a little bit of common sense / knowledge to use)
Why's that? I believe people who write 1 sentence stating an ignorant opinion because they don't know wtf they're talking about can't tell anything apart from anything.
I did enjoy AP Calc, but it was hard as hell working on some of those problems and it's a bit of a let down to step into life and realize all that effort was for naught. I guess it helped with problem solving skills, but I can think of better ways. Also, I don't think it got far along enough to teach realistic applications of the math, and most of those are directly in the science field (I went to college for CIS and am a dev now).
Haha, wow, those are some right wing views you got there AC, more right than mine are left, I'd almost have to say... well get your kid a football helmet, some pepper spray (is this legal in school?), teach them to rat on their peers, encourage playing video games all day (no sports, no lifting weights), teach them not to stand up for their interests (not talents mind you), teach them that fitting in is for losers, and enjoy your trailer park.
Your comments remind of me of those kids on a late night Adult swim show years ago that lived next to a toxic waste dump.
P.S. The schools can't do shit because ratting = popularity insta death sentence in student society. Schools don't have spare $ to get sued either, remember that teacher who yanked a kid off the brooklyn bridge who was about to jump off and got sued for it?
So theorize for us then... where does the water from the melting ice bergs go then?
out think evolution? with what... cancer & aids? I think you mean out-think instincts & natural order.
Congress finally admitting they don't know wtf they're doing when it comes to technology & the internet. So in bureaucratic fashion they pass the problem on to their successor.
Not sure if I want any of Canadian Common Sense to be honest. Then again EVERYBODY should have implemented something like this past the very first copyright lawsuit where the kid got slammed for 6-7 figures, so about a decade later glad to see a single country do it, now about buying a server in Canada... :)
The key word is right in the summary "pressure". Think of how MS packages windows for euro use, yep the door swings both ways. They didn't have to ban U.S. customers, but rather than dealing with the U.S. , they chose to do so, just like google, MS, and a plethora of other companies have in the past. This is hardly news.
Load balancing & Fail over serve two entirely different purposes. What happens when your load balancer has nowhere to balance to (we're talking about streaming HD media after all), or something in the cluster fails? Not a whole lot of places have instant fail-over, so it's going to be interesting to see who takes advantage of this.
Sony does the same with their gaming consoles, I don't remember them removing features though, the timing is way different on the releases also.
I think this is one of those cases where they meant to release the Wii Mini a while ago, but it got internally delayed for whatever reason, so they're releasing it to a scraps market. Next gen consoles may be out by next Christmas already.
Yep, everybody went a bit crazy with Homeland security for a while there, we're still feeling it through stuff like this.
http://www.photographyisnotacrime.com/
Only 318 pages of that eh?
Yep, GIT has stuff like blame, committed by, & change control, bu then again so does just about any modern versioning system. OP probably doesn't write code based on comment and lack of detail.
:( You need about 5 pages of material to learn how to do 90% of stuff in GIT, it gets more complicated in bigger environments, but a lot of it is rinse & repeat. The best I've done with GIT is pair it up with NANT/CruiseControl.NET to get a free & extremely effective build server going. Most of the setup was in the latter two technologies referencing dev & prod environments. A 456 page book about this straight forward of a technology seems a bit excessive. Then again 456 pages is probably an introduction on how to not delete your code with tfs.
It's funnier when you walk into an environment with something like tfs in place and you see that kind of naming convention in use anyways...
:)
Speaking from exp.
And then somebody makes an argument that all devs should be paid equal and the servers start smoking
x86 can run pretty quiet too. Not sure why anybody would ever build anything with ARM without stepping up to a solder gun, which is more in the realm of engineering anyways...
At least a few key PC players found out from SemiAccurate a few months ago, and they were rather incredulous about the news.
That's their source on this, so it's basically pure speculation off of an off-handed source, brilliant. As a manufacturer and engineering firm, Intel probably has 100s of projects in the pipe at any given time doesn't mean they're about to kill the PC lol. Also builders (PC enthusiasts in TFA) are a bit more resourceful than TFA's I've-never-built-a-pc-in-my-life writer gives credit for.
NERD RAGE!!!! RAWRRRRR
"Some proposals could permit governments to censor legitimate speech - or even allow them to cut off internet access.
How is this different from the current internet?
"Other proposals would require services like YouTube, Facebook, and Skype to pay new tolls in order to reach people across borders. This could limit access to information - particularly in emerging markets."
Countries shouldn't be relying on international call rates either, the whole system is a racket, now they want to expand it. And the one bright light...
It has been claimed some countries will try to wrest oversight of the net's technical specifications and domain name system from US bodies to an international organisation.
Anything on U.S. soil is subject to U.S. law, and that hasn't always resulted in the best of scenarios, especially with DNS. The U.S. does own the physical infrastructure for these systems, so chances of us accepting the proposition are probably slim to none, but then again it may be for the best depending on what your intentions are... The U.S. is overzealous on governing the internet, an international organization given the complexity of international law and bureaucracy in general would probably be sluggish and inefficient creating tons of loopholes and work arounds.
Or go driving around boston with an open flame...
Well said... and you're probably right, the TV market looks like Sony vs. Samsung right now, with Panasonic holding down plasmas, but with LED... Sharp had Aquos running good for a while, decent picture, good price, and way thinner than it's counter parts, but it's been almost a decade since those days, not much has changed with Sharp, Sony & Samsung have features that Sharp doesn't. Sharp now sits somewhere between budget and high end tvs, which doesn't have much of a market. Also, Samsung & Sony have way more product lines & some of those product lines integrate with each other (ex. Galaxy Tab controlling your TV), not so with Sharp. I think it's safe to say they've fallen behind the tech curve and the times. When I was buying a TV & I know a few things about them some may say, I never even considered Sharp, I wound up going with Sony on a deal.
:)
There was a time they made vacuums too
An alligator accidentally made the trip in an oversized hidden compartment?
I blame TV & the Internet... speaking of which, there's some pretty good cat videos on this internet thing.
Seriously thought, body and mind require a MASSIVE amount of time to train together and ya people don't f' w you after. In fact, in pro sports a lot of people have made the hall of fame for their smarts on the field that lead to numbers.
Also, not all families are created equal, you seem to have been raised by an exceptional one.
Here ya go buddy:
There's more than 1 type of weight
Now you can start lifting weights too, no excuses! Based on your logic however, stoves killed people in the past I'm sure, don't use stoves! (everything requires at least a little bit of common sense / knowledge to use)
Why's that? I believe people who write 1 sentence stating an ignorant opinion because they don't know wtf they're talking about can't tell anything apart from anything.
I did enjoy AP Calc, but it was hard as hell working on some of those problems and it's a bit of a let down to step into life and realize all that effort was for naught. I guess it helped with problem solving skills, but I can think of better ways. Also, I don't think it got far along enough to teach realistic applications of the math, and most of those are directly in the science field (I went to college for CIS and am a dev now).
Haha, wow, those are some right wing views you got there AC, more right than mine are left, I'd almost have to say... well get your kid a football helmet, some pepper spray (is this legal in school?), teach them to rat on their peers, encourage playing video games all day (no sports, no lifting weights), teach them not to stand up for their interests (not talents mind you), teach them that fitting in is for losers, and enjoy your trailer park. Your comments remind of me of those kids on a late night Adult swim show years ago that lived next to a toxic waste dump. P.S. The schools can't do shit because ratting = popularity insta death sentence in student society. Schools don't have spare $ to get sued either, remember that teacher who yanked a kid off the brooklyn bridge who was about to jump off and got sued for it?
You must be from corporate America! Sup bra!