VMware vSphere Hypervisor VMware vSphere Hypervisor is a free product that provides a simple and easy way to get started with virtualization at no cost. vSphere Hypervisor provides only basic virtualization capabilities, allowing customers to virtualize servers and run applications in virtual machines in a matter of minutes. vSphere Hypervisor cannot connect to VMware vCenter Server and therefore cannot be centrally managed. Users can remotely manage individual vSphere Hypervisor hosts using the vSphere Client. vSphere Hypervisor can be utilized on servers with up to 32GB of physical RAM.
Are you familiar with the concepts of sufficient and necessary? It's entirely possible that there are conditions that may arise in which a cell phone could cause a problem even though by itself a cellphone will never cause an accident.
Three of the top four states for non-vaccination rates are: Washington, Oregon and Vermont. None are well known for being conservative or religious. The fourth is Alaska.
Holy non sequitur Batman! I'm referring of course to "completely ignores". One would assume that when purchasing a service from a company you'd be pricing in the expected lifetime of the company and whether that justifies the purchase price and whether you'd be better of doing something else with those monies.
I dumped a medium sized sprite into the keyboard of my dell xps 1530 laptop. I promptly tipped the whole thing upside down on the floor, to let the soda drain. Grabbed some towels and mopped things up. After leaving it overnight I tried to use it. Keyboard and trackpad buttons were pretty non-functional, sticky mainly. Took it apart. Immersed keyboard and trackpad in sink full of water. Agitated a bit. Rinsed several times. Sat in dish rack to dry. Put back in laptop. Everything works fine.
I'm fairly certain that the only thing in there that is sensitive to liquids is the hard drive and the fans. Otherwise you could dunk the whole laptop in a bucket and then just let it dry out.
I didn't say successive earthquakes didn't happen. I said there wouldn't be major earthquakes at the same location on the same fault line. There's a pretty large difference between a 9.0 and a 7.0 (1,000 times more energy in the 9.0) and even more so between a 9.0 and a 5.0 (1,000,000 times more energy.) Additionally, and I guess it's my bad for not spelling it out for the literal mindes aspies, but I'm talking about different events. Aftershocks are part of the same event. And if you really want to play the pedantic, asshole card, aftershocks do not share an epicenter with the main shock.
You are assuming that it's a random event. Kind of like earthquakes, we can't predict when they will happen but it's certain that we will not have to major earthquakes at the same location on the same fault line. Once you've had one, it takes time for the conditions to arise again.
What you say is true in certain situations, but if the two storage mediums have similar characteristics -- both SATA or maybe SATA & SAS or SATA & IEEE-1394 -- then mbuffer will help keep all your devices going all the time. It's not going to make an enormous difference, but for the minimal effort involved, what not take advantage of the 1% improvement it gives you over a day or two of copying?
Additionally mbuffer gives you the possibility to have multiple writers, so you can make multiple copies without having to reread the source material.
tar treats the directory contents as a data stream. Its much faster for large amounts of files and data.
WTF? Tar creates a stream, but the source data is still files and still have to be read as individual files and are still scattered all over your platters like the individual files that they are. Tar cannot magically transform random reads into sequential reads any more than I can have a four way with Jessica Biel, Scarlett Johansen and Rhianna.
However if you recognize the fact that you have two different sets of media and they will have their own read/write characteristics and there is no need for them to be in any kind of lock step you could track down mbuffer and do something like this which should shave some time off the copy:
tar -cf - * | mbuffer -s 256k -m 512m -o - | (cd/destination && tar -xpf -)
Plus it gives you a nice little status line so you can see how fast it's going and how much has been transferred.
You do realize that RISC has nothing to do with the internals of the processor. It's about the instruction set. And the point was that you could be faster by having simple, fast instructions as opposed to complex, slow instructions. Turns out that Intel has been able to be faster with complex, fast instructions. How that happens inside the chip is irrelevant to the principle in question.
Yeah, well I'm trying to spread out the tracking information. I use gmail for primary email and bing for initial searches. I use hotmail for throw-away and google if I can't find it on bing. And I am an iPhone user with whatever associated tracking bullshit happens there. But at least it's not all with one company.
The apparent amazement about the "plastic" pistol is a bit baffling. I mean come on.
And as far as concern over someone who can not lawfully own a gun using a 3d printer to manufacture a weapon, really? For a very small amount of money pretty much anyone who wants can go buy a gun on the street. For slightly more money they can purchase a totally legal gun through the classifieds or a gun show.
Once it's above a few megapixels I personally care way more about the optics.
However in this specific case I wouldn't be surprised if this particular camera -- if it's even sensical to convert to ISO speeds -- is on the order of ISO 0.02441... (1000 times more light sensitive than ISO 25.)
Conspiracy minded folks would think that SPDY is mainly about Google being able to ensure that advertisements are served before the content. Putting it inside of SSL also ensures that any intermediate carriers won't be stripping Google's adverts.
And where is the counterweight going to go in case of an accident that severs the elevator?
From the PDF:
Are you familiar with the concepts of sufficient and necessary? It's entirely possible that there are conditions that may arise in which a cell phone could cause a problem even though by itself a cellphone will never cause an accident.
You seem to be missing the point. The whole goal is the adware, why would they make a version that doesn't have it?
I'm curious, does it creep you out every time you hear someone say the government has to pay for tax cuts?
Mmmm. Chicken...
It's not religious nuttery, skippy.
Three of the top four states for non-vaccination rates are: Washington, Oregon and Vermont. None are well known for being conservative or religious. The fourth is Alaska.
Holy non sequitur Batman! I'm referring of course to "completely ignores". One would assume that when purchasing a service from a company you'd be pricing in the expected lifetime of the company and whether that justifies the purchase price and whether you'd be better of doing something else with those monies.
I dumped a medium sized sprite into the keyboard of my dell xps 1530 laptop. I promptly tipped the whole thing upside down on the floor, to let the soda drain. Grabbed some towels and mopped things up. After leaving it overnight I tried to use it. Keyboard and trackpad buttons were pretty non-functional, sticky mainly. Took it apart. Immersed keyboard and trackpad in sink full of water. Agitated a bit. Rinsed several times. Sat in dish rack to dry. Put back in laptop. Everything works fine.
I'm fairly certain that the only thing in there that is sensitive to liquids is the hard drive and the fans. Otherwise you could dunk the whole laptop in a bucket and then just let it dry out.
I didn't say successive earthquakes didn't happen. I said there wouldn't be major earthquakes at the same location on the same fault line. There's a pretty large difference between a 9.0 and a 7.0 (1,000 times more energy in the 9.0) and even more so between a 9.0 and a 5.0 (1,000,000 times more energy.) Additionally, and I guess it's my bad for not spelling it out for the literal mindes aspies, but I'm talking about different events. Aftershocks are part of the same event. And if you really want to play the pedantic, asshole card, aftershocks do not share an epicenter with the main shock.
Why would you assume that? CME's are related to sun spots and sun spots have definite cycles.
You are assuming that it's a random event. Kind of like earthquakes, we can't predict when they will happen but it's certain that we will not have to major earthquakes at the same location on the same fault line. Once you've had one, it takes time for the conditions to arise again.
<<
And you want to be my latex salesman!
What you say is true in certain situations, but if the two storage mediums have similar characteristics -- both SATA or maybe SATA & SAS or SATA & IEEE-1394 -- then mbuffer will help keep all your devices going all the time. It's not going to make an enormous difference, but for the minimal effort involved, what not take advantage of the 1% improvement it gives you over a day or two of copying?
Additionally mbuffer gives you the possibility to have multiple writers, so you can make multiple copies without having to reread the source material.
Sounds like Solaris Jumpstart to me.
WTF? Tar creates a stream, but the source data is still files and still have to be read as individual files and are still scattered all over your platters like the individual files that they are. Tar cannot magically transform random reads into sequential reads any more than I can have a four way with Jessica Biel, Scarlett Johansen and Rhianna.
However if you recognize the fact that you have two different sets of media and they will have their own read/write characteristics and there is no need for them to be in any kind of lock step you could track down mbuffer and do something like this which should shave some time off the copy:
tar -cf - * | mbuffer -s 256k -m 512m -o - | (cd /destination && tar -xpf -)
Plus it gives you a nice little status line so you can see how fast it's going and how much has been transferred.
I did. I made the amendments, clicked ok and it let me through.
No commercial use?
Unless you are on the same LAN as the /. servers they cannot see your MAC address. Probably it was your IP subnet.
You do realize that RISC has nothing to do with the internals of the processor. It's about the instruction set. And the point was that you could be faster by having simple, fast instructions as opposed to complex, slow instructions. Turns out that Intel has been able to be faster with complex, fast instructions. How that happens inside the chip is irrelevant to the principle in question.
Yeah, well I'm trying to spread out the tracking information. I use gmail for primary email and bing for initial searches. I use hotmail for throw-away and google if I can't find it on bing. And I am an iPhone user with whatever associated tracking bullshit happens there. But at least it's not all with one company.
The apparent amazement about the "plastic" pistol is a bit baffling. I mean come on.
And as far as concern over someone who can not lawfully own a gun using a 3d printer to manufacture a weapon, really? For a very small amount of money pretty much anyone who wants can go buy a gun on the street. For slightly more money they can purchase a totally legal gun through the classifieds or a gun show.
Err, make that ISO 1000000+. Had my ass where my head belongs.
Once it's above a few megapixels I personally care way more about the optics.
However in this specific case I wouldn't be surprised if this particular camera -- if it's even sensical to convert to ISO speeds -- is on the order of ISO 0.02441... (1000 times more light sensitive than ISO 25.)
Conspiracy minded folks would think that SPDY is mainly about Google being able to ensure that advertisements are served before the content. Putting it inside of SSL also ensures that any intermediate carriers won't be stripping Google's adverts.