Reported science (popular science) is often about single, small group trials. Basically, if you see a science article in mainstream media that seems too good to be true, or highly unusual, check into the background of it before investing in it.
Then I misunderstood what you meant. "power to performance ratio" or something like that would have been clearer. The phrase "power performance" just sounds like you're talking about souped up gaming machines or something where you don't care about power usage, just performance.
Concepts like Snaps, Appimage, or even Docker Containers are great for application developers, as they allow you to develop against certain versions (or certain major releases) of libraries, then not have to worry about dependency hell. Sure, whatever your distro comes up with will generally just work, but, when you want to go outside of what your distro has in it (perhaps you need a later version for some functionality or bugfix, or you need an application not even offered), you can quickly end up in Linux App Hell as you try to mangle together the dependencies, hope it doesn't break something your distro installed and then finally get it compiled and vaguely working.
Not really. Data centers spend a lot of money cooling their systems. If they can get a denser, more power-efficient setup that can do the same thing, they'll definitely be interested in that.
Or don't speculate on such a volatile commodity. Sure, it might see some corrections, but, I see no reason to believe it will not just continue going down over time.
If you have to replace a motherboard under warranty for the iMac Pro, IIRC, they consider that to be a complete unit with the CPU and RAM, and thus won't touch the board if you have replaced the memory or cpu.
Sure, if I were buying it and wanted 32GB, I wouldn't be paying $600 for sure. Just complaining about the inaccurate article (or summary) that claims 32GB is "standard" on the product. If that were the case, then the $799 price point wouldn't actually be that bad.
Doesn't matter if a handful of people abuse it - it's law domestically (and internationally) that allows people to initially enter illegally, then seek asylum. That's allowed under our current system of laws. The current administration is treating a relatively minor crime (per the criminal code) as a major thing, then using that as an excuse to steal children away from their parents under the guise of discouraging what's the legal equivalent of a parking ticket. Even for people seeking asylum. This is a domestic and international human rights crisis.
I care about the borders, but I also care about the people trying to cross the borders. We're taking people who are seeking asylum and stealing their children away from them to scare them away (locking the kids away in facilities that charge thousands per day to hold them, but provide the barest minimum of services to CHILDREN). These are straight up terror tactics, only government condoned.
Better use of AI: Create an AI that can convincingly sound like an old man angry at his "latino" neighbors. Change the pitch and tone per call to mask that it's an AI, and have thousands of them call and flood the phone systems.
Was it just a regular outage that could have happened to anyone, or something very specific to their own infrastructure?
Just because a change was made at some point in the past, you don't get to just assume that everything would have been fine if Change X or Y hadn't been made. Oracle isn't a silver bullet.
Well, you seem to believe that we should portray things as the organization doing it does. The FCC is not doing this in an attempt to help bring the internet to more people, they're doing this because Pai is an industry insider. The FCC is fully captured as a regulatory agency by the industry it's supposed to regulate.
Installers doing a streamlined minimal install build of windows 10 can probably squeeze it in.
Reported science (popular science) is often about single, small group trials. Basically, if you see a science article in mainstream media that seems too good to be true, or highly unusual, check into the background of it before investing in it.
Then I misunderstood what you meant. "power to performance ratio" or something like that would have been clearer. The phrase "power performance" just sounds like you're talking about souped up gaming machines or something where you don't care about power usage, just performance.
Concepts like Snaps, Appimage, or even Docker Containers are great for application developers, as they allow you to develop against certain versions (or certain major releases) of libraries, then not have to worry about dependency hell. Sure, whatever your distro comes up with will generally just work, but, when you want to go outside of what your distro has in it (perhaps you need a later version for some functionality or bugfix, or you need an application not even offered), you can quickly end up in Linux App Hell as you try to mangle together the dependencies, hope it doesn't break something your distro installed and then finally get it compiled and vaguely working.
Not really. Data centers spend a lot of money cooling their systems. If they can get a denser, more power-efficient setup that can do the same thing, they'll definitely be interested in that.
I don't know the specifics of it, but, it's certainly possible for two fuels to have differing amounts of energy produced versus CO2 released.
https://www.eia.gov/tools/faqs...
So, yes, at least according to EIA.gov, natural gas IS "cleaner" than Coal. Not even getting into side-products released when burning coal.
https://upload.wikimedia.org/w...
I mean, maybe in general. But this is California we're talking about.
Not to mention that x32 still lets you use 64-bit native words, etc. for faster computation with the smaller memory footprint.
Or don't speculate on such a volatile commodity. Sure, it might see some corrections, but, I see no reason to believe it will not just continue going down over time.
As for why desktop i3's have quad-cores now, I guess it's just a situation where last-year's bleeding edge becomes this year's standard.
Looks like their 8th generation Core series are 4-cores for i3, 6 for i5 and i7's. At least for their non-mobile/laptop offerings.
If you have to replace a motherboard under warranty for the iMac Pro, IIRC, they consider that to be a complete unit with the CPU and RAM, and thus won't touch the board if you have replaced the memory or cpu.
Sure, if I were buying it and wanted 32GB, I wouldn't be paying $600 for sure. Just complaining about the inaccurate article (or summary) that claims 32GB is "standard" on the product. If that were the case, then the $799 price point wouldn't actually be that bad.
It's probably this one: https://ark.intel.com/products... it's the only 8th generation i3 that runs at 3.6GHz stock.
Legally, no. https://www.ftc.gov/news-event...
Will apple claim it will? Probably.
What? No. 8GB is standard. 32GB is $600 more - almost the full price of the base model.
Does this administration limit such tactics to repeat offenders?
Not ICE. While its current marching orders I strongly disagree with, I don't think ICE should be disbanded. I think this call center was a waste.
Doesn't matter if a handful of people abuse it - it's law domestically (and internationally) that allows people to initially enter illegally, then seek asylum. That's allowed under our current system of laws. The current administration is treating a relatively minor crime (per the criminal code) as a major thing, then using that as an excuse to steal children away from their parents under the guise of discouraging what's the legal equivalent of a parking ticket. Even for people seeking asylum. This is a domestic and international human rights crisis.
More like wasting the resources of a poorly thought out institution that serves no real purpose other than to validate bigotry.
I care about the borders, but I also care about the people trying to cross the borders. We're taking people who are seeking asylum and stealing their children away from them to scare them away (locking the kids away in facilities that charge thousands per day to hold them, but provide the barest minimum of services to CHILDREN). These are straight up terror tactics, only government condoned.
Better use of AI: Create an AI that can convincingly sound like an old man angry at his "latino" neighbors. Change the pitch and tone per call to mask that it's an AI, and have thousands of them call and flood the phone systems.
Was it just a regular outage that could have happened to anyone, or something very specific to their own infrastructure?
Just because a change was made at some point in the past, you don't get to just assume that everything would have been fine if Change X or Y hadn't been made. Oracle isn't a silver bullet.
Well, you seem to believe that we should portray things as the organization doing it does. The FCC is not doing this in an attempt to help bring the internet to more people, they're doing this because Pai is an industry insider. The FCC is fully captured as a regulatory agency by the industry it's supposed to regulate.
So, what if a company puts out a PR piece, do we have to use their language when discussing the company, because they're calling it that?
No. The summary is using a paraphrased version of the Article's title (which you would know if you RTFA)