You're not seeing orbit precession in this video. The ground track "moves" from orbit to orbit primarily because the earth is spinning underneath a relatively stable orbit.
It is true that the orbit is precessing, but it's happening much slower than you can see here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... notes that it's -3.7 degrees PER DAY....Whereas what is most obvious in this video is that the first orbit passes over Italy and the second over France, which is due to the -22.5 degree PER ORBIT spin of the earth below the ISS.
On the back end, if you must store passwords, make sure they are hashed using a modern secure algorithm (AES-256, SHA-2 or SHA-3) and salted, and do that as soon as possible in your back-end processes. No, your users do not need a way to recover >
The rationale for http-2.0 is available in the http-bis charter.Quoting the spec:...
As part of the HTTP/2.0 work, the following issues are explicitly called out for
consideration:
* A negotiation mechanism that is capable of not only choosing between HTTP/1.x and HTTP/2.x, but also for bindings of HTTP URLs to other transports (for example).
* Header compression (which may encompass header encoding or tokenisation)
* Server push (which may encompass pull or other techniques)
It is expected that HTTP/2.0 will:
* Substantially and measurably improve end-user perceived latency in most cases, over HTTP/1.1 using TCP.
* Address the "head of line blocking" problem in HTTP.
* Not require multiple connections to a server to enable parallelism, thus improving its use of TCP, especially regarding congestion control.
* Retain the semantics of HTTP/1.1, leveraging existing documentation (see above), including (but not limited to) HTTP methods, status codes, URIs, and where appropriate, header fields.
* Clearly define how HTTP/2.0 interacts with HTTP/1.x, especially in intermediaries (both 2->1 and 1->2).
* Clearly identify any new extensibility points and policy for their appropriate use.
Mysql and MSSQL (and I assume Oracle and DB2) have had this for a while.
Seems like the headline should be "PostgreSQL finally implements a feature that everybody else has had for years."
There's still a number of key combinations that Calc is missing (most noticeably ctrl-D to copy cell above), and the background color tool is still horribly designed (only contains colors too dark for use as a background, and it does not remember the last chosen color). It's simple stuff like this that keeps people on Excel.
Ctrl-D Works fine in 3.5.0rc3. I just tried it.
The background colors do, indeed, stink. The funny part about the background color setter is that it changes the menubar icon to the last set color, but there doesn't seem to be a way to re-invoke it with the same color.
The article doesn't really make the case. There are two interesting charts, and one is BS (measuring Google News hits for Dragon). He is trying to draw a deep result from the fact that the NIST data he cites ends in 2002. What happened in the last eight years? Lots of arm-waving in the article, but no hard data.
Captions (or subtitles, I can't keep them straight) are a very valuable part of TV & Movies which is sorely missed when downloading video from ITMS.
Loud environments, quiet dialog, nonnative-english-speaking-viewers (or whatever the language of the video is), all are strong reasons for making captions easier to find and use, not harder. Please listen, Apple!
I have been surprised by how hard it is to view captions in the Quicktime format using the Quicktime player. The format seems to have all the necessary pieces ( I think ), but the player makes no provision for doing the right thing, in particular, the way DVD players and TVs composite the text with the video.
Instead the only option seems to be black bands with text on top of them, either via bolt-on SMIL, or via embedded data in the.MOV file.
So it's do-able, but so ugly and unintegrated that nobody does it. (e.g. where is the captions on/off button on the QT player?)
Yes, but how do you use it at starbucks?
on
WiFi Phone Announced
·
· Score: 2, Interesting
All of those pay-to-play Wi-Fi APs in coffee shops and airports need to talk to a browser to authenticate your NIC. It's not clear how you can do that with a phone.
You're not seeing orbit precession in this video. The ground track "moves" from orbit to orbit primarily because the earth is spinning underneath a relatively stable orbit. It is true that the orbit is precessing, but it's happening much slower than you can see here. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... notes that it's -3.7 degrees PER DAY. ...Whereas what is most obvious in this video is that the first orbit passes over Italy and the second over France, which is due to the -22.5 degree PER ORBIT spin of the earth below the ISS.
On the back end, if you must store passwords, make sure they are hashed using a modern secure algorithm (AES-256, SHA-2 or SHA-3) and salted, and do that as soon as possible in your back-end processes. No, your users do not need a way to recover >
No. Use one of
instead. See: http://security.stackexchange....
The rationale for http-2.0 is available in the http-bis charter. Quoting the spec:...
As part of the HTTP/2.0 work, the following issues are explicitly called out for consideration:
It is expected that HTTP/2.0 will:
Mysql and MSSQL (and I assume Oracle and DB2) have had this for a while. Seems like the headline should be "PostgreSQL finally implements a feature that everybody else has had for years."
I found the problem. She skipped "one" during the countdown.
Why not make the batteries replaceable? Just switch them as a gas station, simple.
Because it's a stupid idea for reasons we've covered numerous times before.
...and yet betterplace is implementing this solution with success in Europe, Israel and Japan
http://www.betterplace.com/the-solution-switch-stations
There are lots of opportunities for network hardware to introduce needless latency:
Overview:
http://www.bufferbloat.net/projects/bloat/wiki/Bufferbloat
Demo:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npiG7EBzHOU
There's still a number of key combinations that Calc is missing (most noticeably ctrl-D to copy cell above), and the background color tool is still horribly designed (only contains colors too dark for use as a background, and it does not remember the last chosen color). It's simple stuff like this that keeps people on Excel.
Ctrl-D Works fine in 3.5.0rc3. I just tried it.
The background colors do, indeed, stink. The funny part about the background color setter is that it changes the menubar icon to the last set color, but there doesn't seem to be a way to re-invoke it with the same color.
The article doesn't really make the case. There are two interesting charts, and one is BS (measuring Google News hits for Dragon). He is trying to draw a deep result from the fact that the NIST data he cites ends in 2002. What happened in the last eight years? Lots of arm-waving in the article, but no hard data.
Captions (or subtitles, I can't keep them straight) are a very valuable part of TV & Movies which is sorely missed when downloading video from ITMS.
.MOV file.
s eg.htmlm e/
Loud environments, quiet dialog, nonnative-english-speaking-viewers (or whatever the language of the video is), all are strong reasons for making captions easier to find and use, not harder. Please listen, Apple!
I have been surprised by how hard it is to view captions in the Quicktime format using the Quicktime player. The format seems to have all the necessary pieces ( I think ), but the player makes no provision for doing the right thing, in particular, the way DVD players and TVs composite the text with the video.
Instead the only option seems to be black bands with text on top of them, either via bolt-on SMIL, or via embedded data in the
http://newmedia.scetv.org/webaccesstc/html/capvid
http://www.webaim.org/techniques/captions/quickti
So it's do-able, but so ugly and unintegrated that nobody does it. (e.g. where is the captions on/off button on the QT player?)
All of those pay-to-play Wi-Fi APs in coffee shops and airports need to talk to a browser to authenticate your NIC. It's not clear how you can do that with a phone.
Keep in mind that you're not going to get any ieee1394 storage support on windows without win2K.
... or doubles.