The patent fees were always a percentage of retail price, being the core technology that makes a "cellphone" a "cellphone". The increased phone price wasn't caused by 5G patent fees. Apple didn't like the fact that Qualcomm got more money when they switched a 128GB NAND chip for a 512GB chip and charged the customer $300 more for what is effectively a $30 SD card.
Intel only wanted to do it because Apple guaranteed demand and gave them Qualcomm's IP to use. No one else wants to pay Qualcomm patent license fees just to use an inferior chipset from Intel.
An ID that can be changed at will isn't much different from a fixed one. Any app that has access to the ID and another form of state can track the change. So basically every single app installed on your phone when you make the change, or any app that requires some kind of user log-in.
Your new IDFA will just be added to the same ad profile as your old one was. It's nothing but a false sense of power given to the user.
The point is to also speed the request up. The ping can be done in parallel, you don't need to wait for your click-tracker to redirect you. ad-blockers can also easily block the ping request.
Smoking in the park - because everyone else also has a right to not breathe your smoke Smoking at the University - see above, and by the way, this is private property. Menthol cigarettes - ok , that's kinda weird. Plastic bags (this got un-done by the State) - because people have been proven to be incapable of putting them in the trash. Styrofoam carry out containers - see above Trisodium Phospate (This really pissed me off because it's a GREAT de-greaser, and it's very safe) - because you pour it down the drain and it ends up polluting rivers and the ocean
You don't know they're unfit to be parents until they have kids. You can't then unborn the children without getting in to a whole lot of ethical issues.
except this isn't bandwidth to a central server, where you need capacity for all your customers.
this is bandwidth between a cellphone and the local cell tower, which for 5G networks are going to cover crazy small areas. and each of these towers has multiple antennas and frequency bands, so it's not all shared either.
increasing bandwidth doesn't always decrease latency. If the new protocols require minimum packet sizes, like some encryption and compression algorithms, you end up using more wire bandwidth for the same data, or delaying data until that packet is big enough.
I'm reminded of an old wireless broadband technology, which was based on WCDMA but also incorporated TDMA to increase peak bandwidth. Bandwidth increased but it had a negative impact on latency and jitter, as packets had to be scheduled to fit in the time divisions.
Or... like it says in the summary, they're not taking pictures of cars. They're taking pictures of the toll road sign.
I assume it's for disputes, where the defendant tries to claim the electronic sign wasn't working.
As for the actual question being asked, seems like they're trying to find a solution that fits their preconceived beliefs that ARM based systems must be more power efficient that x86, so therefore must do better in hot environments.
You'll find that ARM systems are gear towards mobile applications. The chips produced generally max die temps around 80 degrees C. You don't want things hotter than that sitting in a passively cooled thing in someones hand.
Intel CPU's on the other hand, come out in flavours that are capable of working at 105C or higher.
Nah, they'd let you use it as much as you want, but every year they'd come in an audit your usage and send you an invoice.
Their database licensing model is to let their customer install it on as many machines as they want, when ever they want, without asking for permission. They then send an invoice based on how many cpu cores you're running it on.
The patent fees were always a percentage of retail price, being the core technology that makes a "cellphone" a "cellphone".
The increased phone price wasn't caused by 5G patent fees.
Apple didn't like the fact that Qualcomm got more money when they switched a 128GB NAND chip for a 512GB chip and charged the customer $300 more for what is effectively a $30 SD card.
Intel only wanted to do it because Apple guaranteed demand and gave them Qualcomm's IP to use.
No one else wants to pay Qualcomm patent license fees just to use an inferior chipset from Intel.
Huawei
They could standardise on an 18650 cell!
That would be perfect to hang from each ear...
An ID that can be changed at will isn't much different from a fixed one.
Any app that has access to the ID and another form of state can track the change. So basically every single app installed on your phone when you make the change, or any app that requires some kind of user log-in.
Your new IDFA will just be added to the same ad profile as your old one was. It's nothing but a false sense of power given to the user.
That's why you pay with bitcoin!
Then the publisher gets the full 30c
You get slapped with a $5 fee and have to wait 15 minutes while it clears, but don't worry about the details.
Who does IDDQD then?
They also like to censor Game of Thrones.
If dragons are nuclear weapons, does that make the white walker's dragon a broken arrow?
I'm sure there would be a lot of damage caused by wearing large earrings when a side impact airbag deploys.
Same goes for glasses too.
What's your point exactly?
Because banning that would impact on music sales.
Meanwhile, the oldest Linux kernel still supported is 3.16, first released in 2014. It won't even get to 6 years before being abandoned.
You've been able to save AirPlay streams for a while now.
There's even software that advertises this specific use case, airserver.com - that've been doing it for years now.
The point is to also speed the request up. The ping can be done in parallel, you don't need to wait for your click-tracker to redirect you.
ad-blockers can also easily block the ping request.
What's with this new era of banning everything?
So far where I live they've banned:
Smoking in the park - because everyone else also has a right to not breathe your smoke
Smoking at the University - see above, and by the way, this is private property.
Menthol cigarettes - ok , that's kinda weird.
Plastic bags (this got un-done by the State) - because people have been proven to be incapable of putting them in the trash.
Styrofoam carry out containers - see above
Trisodium Phospate (This really pissed me off because it's a GREAT de-greaser, and it's very safe) - because you pour it down the drain and it ends up polluting rivers and the ocean
NYC tried? to ban large sodas.
Just stop it. You're not really doing anything.
You don't know they're unfit to be parents until they have kids.
You can't then unborn the children without getting in to a whole lot of ethical issues.
Since when did the royal family need votes?
except this isn't bandwidth to a central server, where you need capacity for all your customers.
this is bandwidth between a cellphone and the local cell tower, which for 5G networks are going to cover crazy small areas. and each of these towers has multiple antennas and frequency bands, so it's not all shared either.
increasing bandwidth doesn't always decrease latency. If the new protocols require minimum packet sizes, like some encryption and compression algorithms, you end up using more wire bandwidth for the same data, or delaying data until that packet is big enough.
I'm reminded of an old wireless broadband technology, which was based on WCDMA but also incorporated TDMA to increase peak bandwidth.
Bandwidth increased but it had a negative impact on latency and jitter, as packets had to be scheduled to fit in the time divisions.
Didn't Verizon already say you can hit 1.45Gbps peak on their 4G LTE network?
Why is their new 5G slower?
https://www.engadget.com/2018/...
How long until Netflix buys one of the traditional studios that supports the oscars?
Conditions of sale.
Unless there is a law that says otherwise, anything they put in there is valid.
Twice the number of this story have been posted, so twice the warming
By "killing off the Pixel 2" they mean continuing to support it, just not sell it any more, as they've been selling the Pixel 3 for a while now.
Or... like it says in the summary, they're not taking pictures of cars. They're taking pictures of the toll road sign.
I assume it's for disputes, where the defendant tries to claim the electronic sign wasn't working.
As for the actual question being asked, seems like they're trying to find a solution that fits their preconceived beliefs that ARM based systems must be more power efficient that x86, so therefore must do better in hot environments.
You'll find that ARM systems are gear towards mobile applications. The chips produced generally max die temps around 80 degrees C. You don't want things hotter than that sitting in a passively cooled thing in someones hand.
Intel CPU's on the other hand, come out in flavours that are capable of working at 105C or higher.
Nah, they'd let you use it as much as you want, but every year they'd come in an audit your usage and send you an invoice.
Their database licensing model is to let their customer install it on as many machines as they want, when ever they want, without asking for permission. They then send an invoice based on how many cpu cores you're running it on.
Kind of like a loan shark or a drug dealer.