...they call themselves "No SQL" and then lash out at relational databases.
Had you read the article, you would've seen that the "No" in NoSQL stands for Not Only, not No, as in none whatsoever. I welcome any and all research into better, tighter synergy between databases and object persistence.
You seem like you've been in the trenches - I'm also looking for a whole-house audio solution. I have 11 pairs of speakers around the house, and I'd like to have a centralized bank of amps and controls in each room (or some other way) to choose what's playing in that room. I love the Sonos model, but would rather not have a stack of Sonos players in the basement. I can add IR repeaters if necessary, and have wifi access all rooms.
I think you chose to split the word at the wrong spot. The derivation of nonsensical is nonsense-ical. The suffix -ical makes the noun nonsense into an adjective. The root word nonsense is, of course, non- (meaning not) and sense.
My suggestion would be ATM - it provides many if not all of the features they want, without having to reinvent the wheel. It is (or was) very popular in Europe, but never seemed to catch on the the US.
Captain Jack Harkness from Torchwood was buried alive at least twice - once for a very long time under London, the other time he was embedded in concrete. You'd go mad, I'm sure.
Goat is fantastic. More flavorful than beef and less 'gamey' than lamb. There's a place here in Richmond called 'The Jerk Pit' that does a mean curried goat.
He didn't say it gave off more heat, he said it was 'hotter'. It runs at a much higher operating temp, so the reflector in the fixture and its proximity to him (as you said) give the perception of it giving off more heat.
Except that if you're using a heat pump vs resistance heating, the unit's SEER value comes into play. My units are SEER 13, so every unit of energy it takes to run the beast pumps 13 units of heat around.
So using incandescent lights for heat actually wastes money - that Watt going into the bulb could be used to provide 13 Watts of heat instead of just 1 (0.9, actually).
I had the same Aha! moment when I heard about sprites.
I like the enhanced VHF propagation that occurs when hurricanes are brewing along the east coast. I live in FM17fr, and I can hear/work 2m repeaters in NC when there's a hurricane off the coast. I attribute it to tropospheric ducting (what I call tropo-ducto; sounds rather magician-ly) rather than sporadic E, of course.
That's what DNS CNAME records are for. You choose a well-known name and map it to the cryptic name. That way you can change the server without disrupting the users. They only know it by it's CNAME.
That's curious. My meter will not block anything. The TRANSFORMER provides some isolation, but for many of us in the US, that's on a utility pole up to 100' from the house. Since the lines from the transformer to the house are usually strung overhead, they make very effective radiators.
Go ahead and do it. It's a great hobby, and there are plenty of different activities on bands not wiped out by BPL or this mess. You can even bounce signals off the moon and talk across the world over our own satellites!
One way would be to observe the red- or blue-shift of the star's spectral lines at the edges of the star. The part with the highest blue shift is coming toward you, the part with the highest red shift is moving away. Connect them with a line and you've got the plane in which the star rotates.
Had you read the article, you would've seen that the "No" in NoSQL stands for Not Only, not No, as in none whatsoever. I welcome any and all research into better, tighter synergy between databases and object persistence.
Verterons, as in ...bulluc sterteth, bucke verteth... ? That makes a verteron a fart particle.
You seem like you've been in the trenches - I'm also looking for a whole-house audio solution. I have 11 pairs of speakers around the house, and I'd like to have a centralized bank of amps and controls in each room (or some other way) to choose what's playing in that room. I love the Sonos model, but would rather not have a stack of Sonos players in the basement. I can add IR repeaters if necessary, and have wifi access all rooms.
Any ideas?
Thanks!
It also happened to the biodiesel guy featured on "Dirty Jobs" - the taxman came knocking since he wasn't paying the road tax.
I think you chose to split the word at the wrong spot. The derivation of nonsensical is nonsense-ical. The suffix -ical makes the noun nonsense into an adjective. The root word nonsense is, of course, non- (meaning not) and sense.
That's because of the George M. Cohan song "I'm a Yankee Doodle Dandy" which includes the line "... born on the 4th of July."
The tablet that the Statue of Liberty is holding says, "July IV, MDCCLXXVI". I've always known it as Independence Day or July [the] 4th.
Dude, it really is like Cosmic, dude. And totally tubular, too.
My suggestion would be ATM - it provides many if not all of the features they want, without having to reinvent the wheel. It is (or was) very popular in Europe, but never seemed to catch on the the US.
Uh, Warp drive? Duh.
Captain Jack Harkness from Torchwood was buried alive at least twice - once for a very long time under London, the other time he was embedded in concrete. You'd go mad, I'm sure.
I read it as "Beware gee-libe answers to complex phenomena" as well. Too much C/Make in my past, too.
Goat is fantastic. More flavorful than beef and less 'gamey' than lamb. There's a place here in Richmond called 'The Jerk Pit' that does a mean curried goat.
They can strip the leaves off blackberry bushes while avoiding the stickers
It's those goaty prehensile lips of theirs.
Ad-laden slideshows...
Is he Bin-laden's cousin?
I'd check your division there, Sparky. 2^127 / 2^ 128 = half. 2^128 / 2^64 = 2^64.
He didn't say it gave off more heat, he said it was 'hotter'. It runs at a much higher operating temp, so the reflector in the fixture and its proximity to him (as you said) give the perception of it giving off more heat.
Except that if you're using a heat pump vs resistance heating, the unit's SEER value comes into play. My units are SEER 13, so every unit of energy it takes to run the beast pumps 13 units of heat around.
So using incandescent lights for heat actually wastes money - that Watt going into the bulb could be used to provide 13 Watts of heat instead of just 1 (0.9, actually).
Understood. I have a relatively modern meter that is read from the street via a 900 MHz link.
I still got pretty bad radiation with my old meter, though. You could walk out under the drop and hear the buzz on 160m thru 2m sometimes.
I had the same Aha! moment when I heard about sprites.
I like the enhanced VHF propagation that occurs when hurricanes are brewing along the east coast. I live in FM17fr, and I can hear/work 2m repeaters in NC when there's a hurricane off the coast. I attribute it to tropospheric ducting (what I call tropo-ducto; sounds rather magician-ly) rather than sporadic E, of course.
That's what DNS CNAME records are for. You choose a well-known name and map it to the cryptic name. That way you can change the server without disrupting the users. They only know it by it's CNAME.
You realize that the police stopped monitoring CBs in the 70's, right? Just after "Convoy" dropped off the Top 40 chart?
That's curious. My meter will not block anything. The TRANSFORMER provides some isolation, but for many of us in the US, that's on a utility pole up to 100' from the house. Since the lines from the transformer to the house are usually strung overhead, they make very effective radiators.
Go ahead and do it. It's a great hobby, and there are plenty of different activities on bands not wiped out by BPL or this mess. You can even bounce signals off the moon and talk across the world over our own satellites!
One way would be to observe the red- or blue-shift of the star's spectral lines at the edges of the star. The part with the highest blue shift is coming toward you, the part with the highest red shift is moving away. Connect them with a line and you've got the plane in which the star rotates.
Incorrect. Current reactor designs are more proliferation-prone than IFR's that employ electrorefining. See this article for more information.