Conversely, I find it hard to work in silence. Music, radio, (with inane chatter) or even a TV in the background helps me so much more. I find silence distracting as I instead here little irregular noises here & there (doors slamming in the building, people shouting in the street etc)
I'm curious, how do "they" access/ interface these huge reams of data? Does anyone have any insight? Surely all this google-size data is useless without a very very good interface to it
But does the cap STOP the bandwidth being used? Or does it just continue, at £10/gb?
Additional tax on cigerettes and booze hasn't caused a decline, I'm pretty sure it's the same scenario here.
If the operators NEED to stop using bandwidth over a certain amount, I'd imagine they would cut off. But stopping service is bad for repuation and bad for revenue
I'd imagine the record company could want to hijack 's twitter account to peddle other bands to their followers to generate sales & hype... Doesn't seem too unreasonable? To record companies, bands are just an tool to make them money right? Their twitter account could then become just another advertising stream until the next fad comes along
Apologies in advance for the trolling but that section seems a bit unnecessary... it's basically saying "if something bad happens to the service you use, something bad can happen to you"?
The light device has little to do with the hypothetical compromise of a cloud service IMO. As well as the feature of changing hue from another image. "Blackout" is a little alarmist when it's just doing what it's told to do...
The hack/comprimised access itself is neat though.
You can roughly calculate camera extrinsic and intrinsic (including lens distortion) parameters from 3 world coordinates. (Assuming they're all in the photos) One presumes with the amount of threshold and flexibility the system needs, that'll be plenty.
It's not that bad, just needs a lot of tweaking to get things to err, give decent persistent output
I've just started with opencl and love it, it's fast, easy, debuggable (codel) and -with stable drivers- not too much of a pain when it goes wrong.
I've been writing hlsl, glsl and arb vertex shaders for years and to me, opencl kernels are basically the same thing (language and limitation wise). Convert some full screen graphics effects to opencl for a first example, then make it do other stuff (maybe with buffers instead of images).
Once you're used to making/debugging kernels, start splitting code/algorithms into smaller chunks, and start parallelising!
Once it works, start digging into specific opencl/cuda stuff (local vs global memory etc) to start optimising
Doesn't seem so bad. I think Thom Yorke is missing a step... spotify pays the LABELS. The LABELS obviously decided the royalties from spotify are enough... Perhaps the labels aren't paying artists enough...
Security bugs in chrome, firefox etc get actively hunted down because of the explicit cash rewards, it clearly works.
I recently "submitted a bug" in an IOS app for a restaurant (web contact form, no email, in-app submission etc), they said I'd get a "free stamp" (collect 5, get a free meal etc) if I sent them the crash logs. Not a big deal, (I'm a developer so not difficult for me to do) but even a small incentive encourages me to actually DO it.
If you/parent company can give away something like like loyalty-card points which relatively cost you nothing, give it away like it's halloween.
Oh surely that's a genius CAPTCHA system! "Correct this flagged-as-wrong OCR text". OCR-bots would surely get it wrong, and the humans would contribute to the greater good!
Of course this assumes the humans can spell and will do correct corrections. MayB Nt th3n!!11!.
A lot of people I know use facebook messaging as their primary messaging. (phone & browser)
Don't forget text's aren't the only way to send messages... whatsapp, imessage, google chat, email... They all have plus points (often to utilitise wifi, or if you're in a different country texting is too expensive)
Heck, most of my phone's usage is probably on facebook, if this was on IOS I'd probably use it.
Noisy tab identification makes up for killing reader. (almost)
Conversely, I find it hard to work in silence. Music, radio, (with inane chatter) or even a TV in the background helps me so much more.
I find silence distracting as I instead here little irregular noises here & there (doors slamming in the building, people shouting in the street etc)
Does anyone have any haar-like classifiers for drones yet? Just for research of course.
And that doesn't influence what they decided to work on/research?
I'm curious, how do "they" access/ interface these huge reams of data? Does anyone have any insight?
Surely all this google-size data is useless without a very very good interface to it
But does the cap STOP the bandwidth being used? Or does it just continue, at £10/gb?
Additional tax on cigerettes and booze hasn't caused a decline, I'm pretty sure it's the same scenario here.
If the operators NEED to stop using bandwidth over a certain amount, I'd imagine they would cut off. But stopping service is bad for repuation and bad for revenue
That fraction being 105/100 ?
The sony xperia costs more than the iphone 5s from O2 in the UK...
They made a mistake of not releasing a cheap option....
Javanese is the overly excited language programmers speak at around 10am after 4 cups of coffee right?
How did you measure the speed?
I'd imagine the record company could want to hijack 's twitter account to peddle other bands to their followers to generate sales & hype... Doesn't seem too unreasonable? To record companies, bands are just an tool to make them money right?
Their twitter account could then become just another advertising stream until the next fad comes along
Apologies in advance for the trolling but that section seems a bit unnecessary... it's basically saying "if something bad happens to the service you use, something bad can happen to you"?
The light device has little to do with the hypothetical compromise of a cloud service IMO. As well as the feature of changing hue from another image. "Blackout" is a little alarmist when it's just doing what it's told to do...
The hack/comprimised access itself is neat though.
I like my women like I like my coffee - With two lumps
You can roughly calculate camera extrinsic and intrinsic (including lens distortion) parameters from 3 world coordinates. (Assuming they're all in the photos)
One presumes with the amount of threshold and flexibility the system needs, that'll be plenty.
It's not that bad, just needs a lot of tweaking to get things to err, give decent persistent output
I've just started with opencl and love it, it's fast, easy, debuggable (codel) and -with stable drivers- not too much of a pain when it goes wrong.
I've been writing hlsl, glsl and arb vertex shaders for years and to me, opencl kernels are basically the same thing (language and limitation wise). Convert some full screen graphics effects to opencl for a first example, then make it do other stuff (maybe with buffers instead of images).
Once you're used to making/debugging kernels, start splitting code/algorithms into smaller chunks, and start parallelising!
Once it works, start digging into specific opencl/cuda stuff (local vs global memory etc) to start optimising
http://www.musicweek.com/news/read/spotify-responds-to-thom-yorke-and-nigel-godrich-criticism/055383
Doesn't seem so bad. I think Thom Yorke is missing a step... spotify pays the LABELS. The LABELS obviously decided the royalties from spotify are enough... Perhaps the labels aren't paying artists enough...
Security bugs in chrome, firefox etc get actively hunted down because of the explicit cash rewards, it clearly works.
I recently "submitted a bug" in an IOS app for a restaurant (web contact form, no email, in-app submission etc), they said I'd get a "free stamp" (collect 5, get a free meal etc) if I sent them the crash logs. Not a big deal, (I'm a developer so not difficult for me to do) but even a small incentive encourages me to actually DO it.
If you/parent company can give away something like like loyalty-card points which relatively cost you nothing, give it away like it's halloween.
They still get in the way and need a cull once in a while. http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-22614350
Are they really endangered? (Getting offtopic...)
Oh surely that's a genius CAPTCHA system!
"Correct this flagged-as-wrong OCR text". OCR-bots would surely get it wrong, and the humans would contribute to the greater good!
Of course this assumes the humans can spell and will do correct corrections. MayB Nt th3n!!11!.
(He said without reading the reviews...)
A lot of people I know use facebook messaging as their primary messaging. (phone & browser)
Don't forget text's aren't the only way to send messages... whatsapp, imessage, google chat, email... They all have plus points (often to utilitise wifi, or if you're in a different country texting is too expensive)
Heck, most of my phone's usage is probably on facebook, if this was on IOS I'd probably use it.
Just a guess, but... 1 input (scene), 2 outputs (renders) ? :)
Perhaps 30% is 33.3333333%
Seeing as a shockingly large amount of tabloid citation/"content" is from twitter, I presume this will apply to microblogging too?...
Just another largely unenforcable rule which will have little effect on anyone apart from the consumer... I can't imagine the EU cookie law has had much effect other than to annoy us... http://www.ico.gov.uk/for_organisations/privacy_and_electronic_communications/the_guide/cookies.aspx
I read that as "Why we should build software like we build Horses"
But then I am drunk at work today.
"Any suggestions on how to identify a reasonable price tag to put on myself?"
Make the prospective employer offer YOU a salary. You are filling THEIR need, find out what it's worth to this company to have that need filled.
On the other hand, if the job is filling YOUR need (money for the bills) then work out how much you need to be paid to cover this