"To this end, the 5G solution will not consist of a single technology but rather an integrated combination of radio-access technologies. This includes existing mobile-broadband technologies such as HSPA and LTE that will continue to evolve and will provide the backbone of the overall radio-access solution beyond 2020. But it also includes new complementary radio-access technologies for specific use cases. Smart antennas, expanded spectrum – including higher frequencies – and improved coordination between base stations will all be crucial to fulfilling the requirements of the future"
See http://www.ericsson.com/news/1...
Yes, and while most prizes are for discoveries, like the Higgs boson, Alfred Nobel stated that the prize could also be given for an important invention in physics.
Re:In a watch, batteries should last a year or mor
on
Android Wear Is Here
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· Score: 1
Normal replacable batteries in a watch?
I was under the impression that automatic quartz watches ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A... )
had taken over the market. Of cause they do have rechable batteries or a capacitor, you just don't replace it.
Tom's Hardware did a performance comparison of Chrome 25, Firefox 19, IE10 & 9 and some version of Opera.
Firefox and Chrome were neck and neck, clearly ahead of the others.
there has been no increase in global temperatures during his entire lifetime.
Please read this Scientific America article, titled "Has Global Warming Paused?": http://www.scientificamerican....
Here is an extract:
'So as a measure of global warming, surface temperatures are not a good yardstick, because the atmosphere can only hold a small percentage of the heat that is
trapped, he said.
Rather, the oceans should be the primary barometer of global climate change.
And they are certainly changing. Sea levels are going up "like gangbusters," Willis said'
Mozilla teamed up with Cisco which wrote H.264 code under the BSD license.
And Cisco now pays for the patent license.
https://blog.mozilla.org/blog/...
According to the Democracy Index which attempts to measure the state of democracy in 167 countries, Norway comes up on top as the most democratic country in the world, followed by Sweden, Iceland and Denmark. Australia is in 6th place and the US comes in at 21. North Korea is (no surprise here) at the bottom and Russia was recently downgraded to an authoritarian regime.
You do realize that you can close the find bar by pressing the Esc key, and that search next/previous is available as F3/shift-F3 or ctrl-G/shift-ctrl-G.
It's a matter of taste, but I think the new search bar is an improvement. And that the find bar is now local for a single tab is more logical, IMHO.
There are some nice improvements but I prefer to be able to view all recent stories on the main page by scrolling a little bit, which works great with old design because it doesn't have a fixed width. Also I don't like the new fonts because the appear to take more space. And I miss the ability to filter the comments. Previously one could filter to only see, for instance, the insightful comments, or easily decide to view the -1 comments or not. Those controls are no longer available.
Please remove the fixed width and bring back the old fonts. And consider making the images on the front page somewhat smaller.
True, but that is likely to be the same for any widely adopted solution. The best protection is probably just to have a question that is fairly unique and yet has a well defined or known answer.
Sherry piking? Sure, but I was replying to the parent's message "Western European Country with the lowest population density".
And yes its hard to make simple comparisons. For instance I think that transportation is just responsible for about 30% of the total energy consumption in the EU, and then one should probably factor in differences in climate and so on.
You have a point in that Europe has a higher population density than the US, but some European countries are less actually less dens.
Country Density Carbon efficiency
- - - - -
USA 35 pop/km2 1.77 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
Sweden 23 pop/km2 0.7 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
Norway 16 pop/km2 0.74 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
That said Sweden and Norway probably have an advantage in having plenty of waterpower.
I think critics' low opinion of some of those authors was deserved, because while those authors were masters of world-building, they were not masters of prose style.
Surely you can't fault the style in Lord Dunsany's The King of Elfland's Daughter.
Sure it can be. The debt as a percentage of GDP decreased under both Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton.
I don't live in the US anymore, though I did, but in my country of residence the national dept was near 80% in 1995. At the end 2010 it had been reduced to about 35%.
I think Keynesian economics is a whole lots snake oil myself but I will concede we don't have a good test lab for it.
It is the dominant economic theory today. "We are all Keynesians now." -- Milton Friedman
The root of all inflation really is government debt.
Inflation can be caused by an overly large money supply, but is more commonly caused a larger demand than supply for goods and services.
In Keynesian economic theory it is acceptable with relatively high levels of public debt in meager times, in order to pay for public investments which when good times follow (hopefully) can be paid back.
Adobe won't update the Flash player beyond version 11.2, but continues to put out security patches. It works well enough for me.
Wind turbines produce about 10 percent of Germany’s electricity.
"To this end, the 5G solution will not consist of a single technology but rather an integrated combination of radio-access technologies. This includes existing mobile-broadband technologies such as HSPA and LTE that will continue to evolve and will provide the backbone of the overall radio-access solution beyond 2020. But it also includes new complementary radio-access technologies for specific use cases. Smart antennas, expanded spectrum – including higher frequencies – and improved coordination between base stations will all be crucial to fulfilling the requirements of the future" See http://www.ericsson.com/news/1...
Yes, and while most prizes are for discoveries, like the Higgs boson, Alfred Nobel stated that the prize could also be given for an important invention in physics.
Normal replacable batteries in a watch? I was under the impression that automatic quartz watches ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A... ) had taken over the market. Of cause they do have rechable batteries or a capacitor, you just don't replace it.
Tom's Hardware did a performance comparison of Chrome 25, Firefox 19, IE10 & 9 and some version of Opera. Firefox and Chrome were neck and neck, clearly ahead of the others.
there has been no increase in global temperatures during his entire lifetime.
Please read this Scientific America article, titled "Has Global Warming Paused?": http://www.scientificamerican....
Here is an extract:
'So as a measure of global warming, surface temperatures are not a good yardstick, because the atmosphere can only hold a small percentage of the heat that is trapped, he said.
Rather, the oceans should be the primary barometer of global climate change.
And they are certainly changing. Sea levels are going up "like gangbusters," Willis said'
Mozilla teamed up with Cisco which wrote H.264 code under the BSD license. And Cisco now pays for the patent license. https://blog.mozilla.org/blog/...
Swedish elections occur every four years and every five years there are elections for the European Parliament.
According to the Democracy Index which attempts to measure the state of democracy in 167 countries, Norway comes up on top as the most democratic country in the world, followed by Sweden, Iceland and Denmark. Australia is in 6th place and the US comes in at 21. North Korea is (no surprise here) at the bottom and Russia was recently downgraded to an authoritarian regime.
You do realize that you can close the find bar by pressing the Esc key, and that search next/previous is available as F3/shift-F3 or ctrl-G/shift-ctrl-G. It's a matter of taste, but I think the new search bar is an improvement. And that the find bar is now local for a single tab is more logical, IMHO.
There are some nice improvements but I prefer to be able to view all recent stories on the main page by scrolling a little bit, which works great with old design because it doesn't have a fixed width. Also I don't like the new fonts because the appear to take more space. And I miss the ability to filter the comments. Previously one could filter to only see, for instance, the insightful comments, or easily decide to view the -1 comments or not. Those controls are no longer available. Please remove the fixed width and bring back the old fonts. And consider making the images on the front page somewhat smaller.
True, but that is likely to be the same for any widely adopted solution. The best protection is probably just to have a question that is fairly unique and yet has a well defined or known answer.
Agreed. I've found asking a question like "What is five plus seventeen?" is much more effective at keeping spambots out than any standard CAPTCHA.
Sherry piking? Sure, but I was replying to the parent's message "Western European Country with the lowest population density". And yes its hard to make simple comparisons. For instance I think that transportation is just responsible for about 30% of the total energy consumption in the EU, and then one should probably factor in differences in climate and so on.
You have a point in that Europe has a higher population density than the US, but some European countries are less actually less dens.
Country Density Carbon efficiency
- - - - -
USA 35 pop/km2 1.77 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
Sweden 23 pop/km2 0.7 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
Norway 16 pop/km2 0.74 CO2 emissions/$ GDP
That said Sweden and Norway probably have an advantage in having plenty of waterpower.
The Crow Road was also made into a fine short TV series by the BBC. And don't miss The Bridge, a somewhat odd, but excellent novel.
I think critics' low opinion of some of those authors was deserved, because while those authors were masters of world-building, they were not masters of prose style.
Surely you can't fault the style in Lord Dunsany's The King of Elfland's Daughter.
The problem is that is does not get paid back.
Sure it can be. The debt as a percentage of GDP decreased under both Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. I don't live in the US anymore, though I did, but in my country of residence the national dept was near 80% in 1995. At the end 2010 it had been reduced to about 35%.
I think Keynesian economics is a whole lots snake oil myself but I will concede we don't have a good test lab for it.
It is the dominant economic theory today. "We are all Keynesians now." -- Milton Friedman
The root of all inflation really is government debt.
Inflation can be caused by an overly large money supply, but is more commonly caused a larger demand than supply for goods and services.
In Keynesian economic theory it is acceptable with relatively high levels of public debt in meager times, in order to pay for public investments which when good times follow (hopefully) can be paid back.
I'll second that. I have several Parker Jotters and I think they are the best ballpoint pens I have ever had.
So it's hotter today that it was during the Mesozoic era
Detailed temperature information exists since 1850 so that must be the time range referred to.
PS, I love Linux as a server, and it runs my Rails stuff very well, but "Linux on the Desktop"? Seriously? Does anyone believe in that anymore?
Sure, why not? I even converted my mother's desktop to Linux. Work great! I would even say that it works better than Windows for her.
Of cause they are working on making Firefox faster. There is even a site set up for tracking progress in Javascript performance improvements.
http://www.arewefastyet.com/?a=b&view=regress
Just checked www.amazon.co.uk, and The Incal is in print at least. Recommended.