From practical experience I find this tricky. Because I am most times not sure whether I could have got a thing at a lower price, I avoid Bargain shopping, because I am afraid when I show it to freinds they might have bought it for less.
I feel this same feeling of uncertainity would keep me off these Dynamic prices where I could miss a $100 bargain by a second. It can only attract the kind of bargain player that we have for traditional shopping but I wonder whether people like to be on the edge while shopping, that too a thing like a computer where you are buying it perhaps only once or at least not so often like clothes or such.
So in the case of Walmsley's device, 50 different frequencies of light shine through the modulator, and if the 20th frequency is the altered one, then Walmsley knows that the bit of information he was searching for is located at position 20 in the database. A conventional computer would have had to check 20 times to find the location.
It sounds all so simple that I can't help but ask : why nobody ever thought of it?
It's a silly movie, but knowingly silly, and it's also entertaining and -- even, at moments -- inventive.
Most movies that have been hits in recent times have been silly. It's proibably because to many serious things are happening around us and we haven't been able to afford to be silly in our social lives.
But do the machines really make so much noise so as to disturb one from other activities? I watch TV as well as listen to music while working at something, at other times my kids are doing the watching while I work, but I've never had any problems.
Hiroshima survivors seem to have done very well for themselves, having used their mental and physical resources to the maximum, without much of natural resources in the land. And if the mutations have such a positive effect then slow radiation is welcome.
Even though our upbringing may be ideal but a certain age and the human mind work towards finding out things for themselves. And the banned items give the most excitement and thrill of life, and as such the upbringing comes to naught. The internet being so private unleashes the desire to take a peep into the other world, without the risk of the parents ever finding out.
This kind of automated filter along with the manual control will certainly come in handy, although I would like to advice parents to leave some scope for indulgence so that the children are not desperate enough to fid other more complex ways of satisfying the quest for information in those fields. And it all wears of in time because the novelty of the situation no longer exists.
Having been out of use for so long would have definitely taken it's toll. In such a scenario is it worth renovating those damaged pipes as opposed to placing new and wider pipelines?
This typically means that all schema changes in an OODBMS will involve a system wide recompile. Also updating all the instance objects within the database can take an extended period of time depending on the size of the database.
Can the music companies outside denmark put pressure on the govt. asking their right to allow users to share music that does not in any case belong to that country.
Yes I understand without the govts. support even this would be dificult because if the govt is disinclined towards a rule they have been forced to form, they would hardly take the effort to punish people violating it.
Craig Mundie, a senior vice president at Microsoft and one of its software strategists, will argue that the company already follows the best attributes of the open-source model.
The best attribute of open-source model is the free use of their software. And considering that in Countries like India most people do not pay for installing the MS Software due to piracy, he's probably right.
I started my website as a simple business proposition and was being paid a hefty sum for it but now even though the money offer is no longer lucrative and only the front page being updated, I am addicted to it and even though I could simply make it a weekly update I am stuck to updating it everyday.
And now that we were geting used to all the free stuff, comes the pay services, I suppose I'll simply go back to not using the facility.
And that's what many people are going to do. That could be both good as well as bad, the initial slump may be a little harsh but when you are left with only serious users you can plan accordingly.
Payne said he agreed that Infineon may have learned some preliminary details related to Rambus' synchronous memory technology during early discussions to license Rambus DRAM in 1990 and 1991. "But then there is a long leap to June 23, 2000, when Rambus next sent a letter to Infineon about its SDRAM patents" awarded in the 1999-2000 time period. Payne said it "would be a leap of faith" that during the 10-year interval Infineon had been intentionally trying to violate the patents.
What do you guys feel? Is basing and developing further on other's research illegal and if so should it be considered so?
Haas explained he was burned out, and that "Three or four years of trying to do as much as humanly possible will do that to you."
Maybe changing track is the real answer and that's what he seems to be doing. Good for him because some guys are so addicted to their work that once they leave it, they go through severe depression as they just don't seem to know what else to do, their previous addiction having left them good for nothing. They just drift around till they've had enough and go back to doing the same thing that is if they find their direction again, but many a times they just drift through life unable to go back or do anything else.
It's high time people started finding solutions to this because now we are seeing many young retirees especially in the internet field -- these guys have made their money through hard work and now know there is nothing more to gain as of now and so are in retirement.
Nanotechnology would allow materials to be produced on a very small scale but in much higher volumes and at lower costs than traditional materials and manufacturing processes.
"It will take several years and additional breakthroughs before nanochips become as prevalent as silicon chips are today," said Harvard Professor Charles Lieber.
A possible shortcut, Lieber said, is the development of hybrid silicon-nanotechnology chips. Hybrid chips could be ready in about five years, he said, while pure nanochips will likely come within a decade.
Hybrid chips would be extremely dense, allowing substantial gains in processor speeds or the amount of data a memory chip can hold.
Looks like a substantial achievement from all this.
"MY [TRAFFIC] CONVERSION rates are not what they used to be," said Brad Gosse, president of Adult Money Maker, operator of about 10,000 sites.
It used to be that one in 100 visitors to Gosse's pay sites bought a membership. Now, that figure is one in 400. As a result, his revenue -- which he wouldn't disclose -- is flat.
Civil liberties groups are outraged by the proposals. The digital safe-deposits will contain highly sensitive personal information and are vulnerable to hack attacks. It also centralises personal information, which creates the technical conditions for law enforcement authorities to get easy access to all the personal data of citizens. Furthermore there is the fear that for instance insurance companies will order access to the medical information before closing a deal.
That I suppose sums it all up.
What else can you expect from governments. They tend to get so excited with proposals put forward by some dimwit and ofcourse they always overestimate their own capacity when formulating State Policy. And now you know why they fail.
If this is true, then it's worth a new language
on
Programming Ruby
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· Score: 1
Ruby weaves the best features of the best programming languages into a seamless, concise whole.
Ruby puts the fun back into programming. When was the last time you had fun writing a program---a program that worked the first time; a program that you could read next week, next month, or next year and still understand exactly what it does?
Other reasons for why this is good for us is here.
The tone of the post is far from funny but the very absurdity of the arguments make it funny (as evident from the moderation). Obviously Linus Trovaldus is an intelligent guy and if he, along with his thousands of fans, have thought Linux is best free, we can't call it's free use as theft.
Is accepting Government aid stealing because it is free (or because the taxpayers or industries are paying for it)?
I have been on the look out for just the thing, thanks pal. In Slash you gotta stick to the topic or be moderated down and no one reads your views even though it may be interesting. Most time the topics aren't the one's I am interested with at the moment. In case theri other sites with related but a varied concept do let me know please.
Even Microsoft knows some boundries are better left uncrossed and a thing has a limit to how far it can be streched. Good they realize before it's too late.
I have been following Slashdot for a few months now and one thing that baffles me is how is it that the same kind of articles attract so many posts. Aren't people exhausted on commenting on the same thing over and over again?
I feel this same feeling of uncertainity would keep me off these Dynamic prices where I could miss a $100 bargain by a second. It can only attract the kind of bargain player that we have for traditional shopping but I wonder whether people like to be on the edge while shopping, that too a thing like a computer where you are buying it perhaps only once or at least not so often like clothes or such.
So in the case of Walmsley's device, 50 different frequencies of light shine through the modulator, and if the 20th frequency is the altered one, then Walmsley knows that the bit of information he was searching for is located at position 20 in the database. A conventional computer would have had to check 20 times to find the location. It sounds all so simple that I can't help but ask : why nobody ever thought of it?
Most movies that have been hits in recent times have been silly. It's proibably because to many serious things are happening around us and we haven't been able to afford to be silly in our social lives.
But do the machines really make so much noise so as to disturb one from other activities? I watch TV as well as listen to music while working at something, at other times my kids are doing the watching while I work, but I've never had any problems.
Hiroshima survivors seem to have done very well for themselves, having used their mental and physical resources to the maximum, without much of natural resources in the land. And if the mutations have such a positive effect then slow radiation is welcome.
This kind of automated filter along with the manual control will certainly come in handy, although I would like to advice parents to leave some scope for indulgence so that the children are not desperate enough to fid other more complex ways of satisfying the quest for information in those fields. And it all wears of in time because the novelty of the situation no longer exists.
Having been out of use for so long would have definitely taken it's toll. In such a scenario is it worth renovating those damaged pipes as opposed to placing new and wider pipelines?
This seems reason enough to me.
Yes I understand without the govts. support even this would be dificult because if the govt is disinclined towards a rule they have been forced to form, they would hardly take the effort to punish people violating it.
The best attribute of open-source model is the free use of their software. And considering that in Countries like India most people do not pay for installing the MS Software due to piracy, he's probably right.
I started my website as a simple business proposition and was being paid a hefty sum for it but now even though the money offer is no longer lucrative and only the front page being updated, I am addicted to it and even though I could simply make it a weekly update I am stuck to updating it everyday.
And that's what many people are going to do. That could be both good as well as bad, the initial slump may be a little harsh but when you are left with only serious users you can plan accordingly.
What do you guys feel? Is basing and developing further on other's research illegal and if so should it be considered so?
Maybe changing track is the real answer and that's what he seems to be doing. Good for him because some guys are so addicted to their work that once they leave it, they go through severe depression as they just don't seem to know what else to do, their previous addiction having left them good for nothing. They just drift around till they've had enough and go back to doing the same thing that is if they find their direction again, but many a times they just drift through life unable to go back or do anything else.
It's high time people started finding solutions to this because now we are seeing many young retirees especially in the internet field -- these guys have made their money through hard work and now know there is nothing more to gain as of now and so are in retirement.
"It will take several years and additional breakthroughs before nanochips become as prevalent as silicon chips are today," said Harvard Professor Charles Lieber.
A possible shortcut, Lieber said, is the development of hybrid silicon-nanotechnology chips. Hybrid chips could be ready in about five years, he said, while pure nanochips will likely come within a decade.
Hybrid chips would be extremely dense, allowing substantial gains in processor speeds or the amount of data a memory chip can hold.
Looks like a substantial achievement from all this.
It used to be that one in 100 visitors to Gosse's pay sites bought a membership. Now, that figure is one in 400. As a result, his revenue -- which he wouldn't disclose -- is flat.
From what I hear Java/java programmers seem to be in less demand these days. Many H1 visa holders with java skills are being asked to go back.
What is carpal tunnel syndrome? And does it affect the worker's safety or endangers the safety of others?
Just a limmeric.
That I suppose sums it all up.
What else can you expect from governments. They tend to get so excited with proposals put forward by some dimwit and ofcourse they always overestimate their own capacity when formulating State Policy. And now you know why they fail.
Ruby puts the fun back into programming. When was the last time you had fun writing a program---a program that worked the first time; a program that you could read next week, next month, or next year and still understand exactly what it does?
Other reasons for why this is good for us is here.
Is accepting Government aid stealing because it is free (or because the taxpayers or industries are paying for it)?
I have been on the look out for just the thing, thanks pal. In Slash you gotta stick to the topic or be moderated down and no one reads your views even though it may be interesting. Most time the topics aren't the one's I am interested with at the moment. In case theri other sites with related but a varied concept do let me know please.
Even Microsoft knows some boundries are better left uncrossed and a thing has a limit to how far it can be streched. Good they realize before it's too late.
I have been following Slashdot for a few months now and one thing that baffles me is how is it that the same kind of articles attract so many posts. Aren't people exhausted on commenting on the same thing over and over again?