Basically a bunch of command line crap where there should be a simple desktop client and hyperlinks. Sure it's not hard but it's still the wrong way to do it.
I'm not going to say the actual math is all that important. If you have trouble with even basic calculus though then you probably aren't suited to programming. You can perhaps fix the underlying problem though. You just have to find what it is.
When I dream of a juicy hamburger its sure the hell ain't cultured meat.
Eventually there could be several advantages over your "real" burger actually.
1) No need to grind it up. Grow it in the proper shape/texture and cook. 2) You can cook it as rare as you like. 3) Get the exact amount of fat you want so your burger is in fact juicy. 4) High quality cuts might be mass producible.
Steam only has DRM the publishers chose. You're free to support the ones who do things DRM free. Steam does not require a connection to play in any way shape or form.
Amazon is testing the market with kidâ(TM)s show and comedies
The networks have people overloaded on comedies. Kids content isn't exactly lacking either. They need to put out something different if they want any interest.
I notice you have your real name linked on your homepage. Good for you not being a hypocrite. Unfortunately this led to you invalidating your point instantly.
You must be joking. They're putting everyone at risk by not getting vaccinations. If we actually had a large outbreak of polio there would be a good chance for a dangerous mutation.
The whole thing is a big test. Likely they are picking the area's based on their ability to handle the expected customers. They'll work their way from the bottom up in that situation.
Actually this may be a good example of something that could heavily benefit from JIT compiling. Since they're unsure what their own program needs to do it's going to be hard to optimize it manually.
The story here is that if you use Tor you might be flagging yourself as a "valid US target".
By saying he's a really great guy? I'm not sure what you look for in art but it's truly twisted you around.
Ultimately they are the ones who want used game protection. They may try and bury the PS4 with Xbone exclusives.
Take Ubuntu for instance. A large amount of software out there isn't on their repositories. The "supported" way to get it is something called PPA.
Here's how you install a PPA: https://help.launchpad.net/Packaging/PPA/InstallingSoftware
Basically a bunch of command line crap where there should be a simple desktop client and hyperlinks. Sure it's not hard but it's still the wrong way to do it.
I think you're giving too much credit to the internet. Journalistic integrity was already in a sad decline before the web took off.
I'm not going to say the actual math is all that important. If you have trouble with even basic calculus though then you probably aren't suited to programming. You can perhaps fix the underlying problem though. You just have to find what it is.
That's the interesting thing about this technology. It can be reflective OR backlit. Combining it with the paperwhite lighting should work great.
Eventually there could be several advantages over your "real" burger actually.
1) No need to grind it up. Grow it in the proper shape/texture and cook.
2) You can cook it as rare as you like.
3) Get the exact amount of fat you want so your burger is in fact juicy.
4) High quality cuts might be mass producible.
Steam only has DRM the publishers chose. You're free to support the ones who do things DRM free. Steam does not require a connection to play in any way shape or form.
These are the facts.
The networks have people overloaded on comedies. Kids content isn't exactly lacking either. They need to put out something different if they want any interest.
I suspect any lost "profit" is simply due to increased competition. The industry itself is still huge.
From Ubuntu's point of view drivers are what matter. If Wayland is causing them problems on that front then they probably have to drop it.
It's simply not something coders worry about. They should but in general they don't. They create the bar then arbitrarily tie in random points to it.
He didn't mean Javascript is hard to understand. He meant it's difficult to write understandable code in Javascript.
They'd have to give a discount on food as well. At least in the US popcorn and a drink run you as much as the ticket.
The black market value is heavily influenced by the actual retail price.
I notice you have your real name linked on your homepage. Good for you not being a hypocrite. Unfortunately this led to you invalidating your point instantly.
You must be joking. They're putting everyone at risk by not getting vaccinations. If we actually had a large outbreak of polio there would be a good chance for a dangerous mutation.
The whole thing is a big test. Likely they are picking the area's based on their ability to handle the expected customers. They'll work their way from the bottom up in that situation.
Why are you putting everything on the same Steam account? I can definitely see an argument for Steam LAN or something but it's not that big a deal.
How they want to compile it is their choice. That's the entire point of open source.
Windows is not a gaming OS and you shouldn't be playing games on your 5 dollar integrated video chip. PS3 vs Wii vs 360 is much harder to deal with.
If Steam puts out a list of sane hardware restrictions then the software will work better than the current crop of console stuff.
He's talking about CPU enforced no-execute rules. The thing you're getting upset about is a bios trick to stop certain root exploits.
Two completely different things. Ironically the thing he's talking about stops the exploits you list.
Actually this may be a good example of something that could heavily benefit from JIT compiling. Since they're unsure what their own program needs to do it's going to be hard to optimize it manually.
Even still it seems like they are pushing it here. They aren't going to sucker so many non-gamers this time.