What do they mean with the smallest ad thing? The smallest ad _anywhere_ or the smallest ad on a _bee_ ? The first doesn't hold up for sure. I find the article somewhat inaccurate generally.
One nanometer is one billionth of a meter.. that's the definition.
Re:Imagine the potential
on
EULA In Games
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· Score: 1
That doesn't seem to be something for the bigger companies to do, I think... since it seems like a low-life scamming practise and that's not good PR. It seems more trouble than it's worth.
Isn't there some law that requires products purchased, etc to be clearly stated somewhere? This seems like something that many people must've already thought of so it's probably already abused often enough to catch the attention.
Uhm... if they don't have backups, then how do they stay in business? I mean, the chance of disaster striking during a large time period is pretty high. If you lose data because you don't keep good backups, then you pretty much deserve to get into a little trouble IMO...
So will Intel, et al set up their own power plants now or what? Generally though, I am expecting these companies (the bigger ones at least) to have their own Diesel generators or whatever on standby for just in case. Or am I mistaken here?
Re:Information *IS* Darwinian
on
The Regulon
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· Score: 1
Hhm.. isn't that how urban legends continue to exist?;-)
What do they mean with the smallest ad thing? The smallest ad _anywhere_ or the smallest ad on a _bee_ ? The first doesn't hold up for sure. I find the article somewhat inaccurate generally.
Well, out of the top of my head:
1nm (nano) = 10^-9m
1um (micro) = 10^-6m
1mm (milli) = 10^-3m
1m = 10^0m
1km (kilo) = 10^3m
1Mm (mega) = 10^6m
1Gm (giga) = 10^9m
One nanometer is one billionth of a meter.. that's the definition.
That doesn't seem to be something for the bigger companies to do, I think... since it seems like a low-life scamming practise and that's not good PR. It seems more trouble than it's worth.
Isn't there some law that requires products purchased, etc to be clearly stated somewhere? This seems like something that many people must've already thought of so it's probably already abused often enough to catch the attention.
Uhm... if they don't have backups, then how do they stay in business? I mean, the chance of disaster striking during a large time period is pretty high. If you lose data because you don't keep good backups, then you pretty much deserve to get into a little trouble IMO...
So will Intel, et al set up their own power plants now or what? Generally though, I am expecting these companies (the bigger ones at least) to have their own Diesel generators or whatever on standby for just in case. Or am I mistaken here?
Hhm.. isn't that how urban legends continue to exist? ;-)