Side effects include nausea, sleep disturbance, constipation, flatulence, vomiting, severe diarrhea, rectal bleeding, runny nose, dizziness, decrease in semen, dry mouth, insomnia, coma or death, and trouble swallowing.
The data longevity of 3-bits per cell NAND is quite poor. MLC's 2-bits per cell still has me uneasy. Storing 1 of 8 voltage levels in an environment that leaks electrons over time is not for me. I'll wait for XPoint before upgrading my MLC SSD.
It has everything to do with the general well-being of the populace. "Life" is referenced a few times in the constitution. If coal byproducts will shorten my "Life" then I'm all for the government to at least pick out the losers. Now, since we cannot be left without electricity after taking down coal, I'm also fine with folks proposing an alternative. Classic "don't complain without a solution". Clinton is proposing a solution. That's all it is, a proposal if elected.
SpaceX has probably been performed random testing of these struts for the 7 years (17 rockets) in which they did not find a failure. The failure rate is less than 0.1% in this case, but was virtually 0% until the first failure. Try determining a standard deviation when there were no failures to date.
Elon stated on the conference call that material analysis of the 2nd strut to fail at 2,000 lbs revealed a problem with the grain structure in the steel. All other bets are off regarding speculation of points where the strut may have buckled. The steel was to blame, not the assembly.
While there were a significant number of struts that failed at 6,000 lbs (3x what's needed) rather than the rated 10,000 lbs, only 1 in a batch of 1,000 struts failed at 2,000 lbs. They found a 0.1% failure rate. Random testing from a batch would not have found the needle in the haystack. SpaceX (Elon) has said they will test each and every strut now, not just a few.
"Woo also counseled the company to focus on making it easy for a user to don the ReWalk. That could make the difference between a device that someone wants to use every day, he said, and one that ends up in a closet."
No one is going to spend $70,000 on an exoskeleton and let it end up in a closet. For that kind of money, you'll find a way to put it on, or not buy it in the first place.
How does a group like that not notice 400GB of traffic exiting the building? If it were done in a single day, the hackers would need to draw down 4,629,629 bytes per second sustained for 24 hours.
In John Carmack's in-depth critique of a horror genre GearVR game https://www.facebook.com/perma... he too had a thought that people will die from VR:
'Some of the scares are just perfect â" walking along, see a table off to the side, turn to pick up loot, turn back to carry on, and *JESUS CHRIST*!!! Someone is going to have a heart attack in a VR horror game, it is only a matter of time. There were also times when I was legitimately afraid for a minute or two, since I really didnâ(TM)t know what the rules of the environment were.
When I did get jumped, I desperately wanted an endurance limited sprint option instead of the nightmare slowness of normal walking speed, but there would be VR comfort issues to consider.'
While I too consider it fraud, and have had my AT&T unlimited service throttled after 5GB/month, I really think that "jail" is not the answer for everything. This was not a violent crime. Simply take ALL of their money, and make them start from scratch again. Could even break them up. Hit them where it hurts, in the wallet. I don't want to pay more for their stay in prison with MY tax money, I want to get a refund with THEIR money.
Given the money remaining in the budget for Commercial Crew, NASA should reduce the number of entrants from 2 to 1 and fully fund SpaceX. Tell Boeing that their CST-100 is no longer needed, thanks for playing, and get lost.
I actually think the two-year delay is to buy time until ULA's Vulcan can fly; since CST-100 was slated for Atlas V and all purchased RD-180 engines are slated for the military block buy.
You should be able to touch-type. There are bumps on the F and J keys for a reason, so that you can find the keys. If you use ASDW for movement, find the F key with your index finger via the bump, then move one key to the left. Voila, you've found the controls!
Using your number of 40,000km and the aforementioned 1,100km that SpaceX is considering, would a system with just 2.75% of the latency be enough for you? 3ms for every 100ms that you previously experienced due to the distance alone.
Anyone with a clue makes their profile private such that only friends may see their posts. Most children are told explicitly to do this by parents because of creepy stalkers. These clowns are actually receiving/spending tax payer's money to stalk. Illegal on so many levels.
Googling the JEDEC document number JESD235 from the article found several references with NVIDIA talking about this for 2 years now for their Pascal series of chips after Maxwell.
Could not disagree more. With a newborn, child daycare will cost me $1515 per month. An increase in my salary will help me be in the office 5 days a week vs. working from home, pretending to work while tending to the newborn. Being able to afford child care will be a huge boost in productivity for the company. A very smart move on his part.
The full tweet was as follows:
@elonmusk: @ID_AA_Carmack Looks like the issue was stiction in the biprop throttle valve, resulting in control system phase lag. Should be easy to fix.
Ah, but it does let one circumvent the rule of no cappuccino after 10am. Every 90 minutes the ISS crosses a time zone where it's 9am, and there's always a new sunrise every 90 minutes. We are speaking of espresso after all; not http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caffè_Americano.
The boiling point of CH4 is only 111.66 K (258.68 F; 161.49 C) while liquid H2 needs to be cooled to 20.28 K (423.17 F; 252.87 C). It's far easier to refrigerate liquid methane than liquid hydrogen. Trying to reach 20 K on Mars will require much more equipment than that needed for 111 K. Liquid hydrogen is about 25% more efficient (455 vs. 363 vacuum Isp) but is much less dense than liquid methane; so a hydrogen rocket needs to be larger and insulated. A smaller lighter rocket helps makes up for the lower specific impulse.
I've used the MS Natural 4000 at work for several years now (5 keyboards on my desk, 2 used daily) and 1 at home for gaming. None of my work keyboards have decals have worn off. Most of the keys are shiny though. My keyboard at home has the W key worn off though from moving forward in games. If you're looking down at the keyboard for keys that wear out the fastest, you're not touch-typing.
Side effects include nausea, sleep disturbance, constipation, flatulence, vomiting, severe diarrhea, rectal bleeding, runny nose, dizziness, decrease in semen, dry mouth, insomnia, coma or death, and trouble swallowing.
The data longevity of 3-bits per cell NAND is quite poor. MLC's 2-bits per cell still has me uneasy. Storing 1 of 8 voltage levels in an environment that leaks electrons over time is not for me. I'll wait for XPoint before upgrading my MLC SSD.
It has everything to do with the general well-being of the populace. "Life" is referenced a few times in the constitution. If coal byproducts will shorten my "Life" then I'm all for the government to at least pick out the losers. Now, since we cannot be left without electricity after taking down coal, I'm also fine with folks proposing an alternative. Classic "don't complain without a solution". Clinton is proposing a solution. That's all it is, a proposal if elected.
SpaceX has probably been performed random testing of these struts for the 7 years (17 rockets) in which they did not find a failure. The failure rate is less than 0.1% in this case, but was virtually 0% until the first failure. Try determining a standard deviation when there were no failures to date.
Elon stated on the conference call that material analysis of the 2nd strut to fail at 2,000 lbs revealed a problem with the grain structure in the steel. All other bets are off regarding speculation of points where the strut may have buckled. The steel was to blame, not the assembly.
While there were a significant number of struts that failed at 6,000 lbs (3x what's needed) rather than the rated 10,000 lbs, only 1 in a batch of 1,000 struts failed at 2,000 lbs. They found a 0.1% failure rate. Random testing from a batch would not have found the needle in the haystack. SpaceX (Elon) has said they will test each and every strut now, not just a few.
"Woo also counseled the company to focus on making it easy for a user to don the ReWalk. That could make the difference between a device that someone wants to use every day, he said, and one that ends up in a closet."
No one is going to spend $70,000 on an exoskeleton and let it end up in a closet. For that kind of money, you'll find a way to put it on, or not buy it in the first place.
How does a group like that not notice 400GB of traffic exiting the building? If it were done in a single day, the hackers would need to draw down 4,629,629 bytes per second sustained for 24 hours.
In John Carmack's in-depth critique of a horror genre GearVR game https://www.facebook.com/perma... he too had a thought that people will die from VR: 'Some of the scares are just perfect â" walking along, see a table off to the side, turn to pick up loot, turn back to carry on, and *JESUS CHRIST*!!! Someone is going to have a heart attack in a VR horror game, it is only a matter of time. There were also times when I was legitimately afraid for a minute or two, since I really didnâ(TM)t know what the rules of the environment were. When I did get jumped, I desperately wanted an endurance limited sprint option instead of the nightmare slowness of normal walking speed, but there would be VR comfort issues to consider.'
While I too consider it fraud, and have had my AT&T unlimited service throttled after 5GB/month, I really think that "jail" is not the answer for everything. This was not a violent crime. Simply take ALL of their money, and make them start from scratch again. Could even break them up. Hit them where it hurts, in the wallet. I don't want to pay more for their stay in prison with MY tax money, I want to get a refund with THEIR money.
Given the money remaining in the budget for Commercial Crew, NASA should reduce the number of entrants from 2 to 1 and fully fund SpaceX. Tell Boeing that their CST-100 is no longer needed, thanks for playing, and get lost.
I actually think the two-year delay is to buy time until ULA's Vulcan can fly; since CST-100 was slated for Atlas V and all purchased RD-180 engines are slated for the military block buy.
You should be able to touch-type. There are bumps on the F and J keys for a reason, so that you can find the keys. If you use ASDW for movement, find the F key with your index finger via the bump, then move one key to the left. Voila, you've found the controls!
The 3rd comment mentioned it, but it's also listed here http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Using your number of 40,000km and the aforementioned 1,100km that SpaceX is considering, would a system with just 2.75% of the latency be enough for you? 3ms for every 100ms that you previously experienced due to the distance alone.
I never said Facebook. Social networking includes Google+, Twitter, and dozens more listed here http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki...
Anyone with a clue makes their profile private such that only friends may see their posts. Most children are told explicitly to do this by parents because of creepy stalkers. These clowns are actually receiving/spending tax payer's money to stalk. Illegal on so many levels.
Googling the JEDEC document number JESD235 from the article found several references with NVIDIA talking about this for 2 years now for their Pascal series of chips after Maxwell.
future-nvidia-pascal-gpus-pack-3d-memory-homegrown-interconnect
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/High_Bandwidth_Memory
http://www.cs.utah.edu/thememoryforum
Could not disagree more. With a newborn, child daycare will cost me $1515 per month. An increase in my salary will help me be in the office 5 days a week vs. working from home, pretending to work while tending to the newborn. Being able to afford child care will be a huge boost in productivity for the company. A very smart move on his part.
The full tweet was as follows:
@elonmusk: @ID_AA_Carmack Looks like the issue was stiction in the biprop throttle valve, resulting in control system phase lag. Should be easy to fix.
Ah, but it does let one circumvent the rule of no cappuccino after 10am. Every 90 minutes the ISS crosses a time zone where it's 9am, and there's always a new sunrise every 90 minutes. We are speaking of espresso after all; not http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caffè_Americano.
If there's a low-Earth, there must also be a middle-Earth to complement a high-Earth, yes?
Thank you Slashdot for removing the negative signs from the temps :-(
The boiling point of CH4 is only 111.66 K (258.68 F; 161.49 C) while liquid H2 needs to be cooled to 20.28 K (423.17 F; 252.87 C). It's far easier to refrigerate liquid methane than liquid hydrogen. Trying to reach 20 K on Mars will require much more equipment than that needed for 111 K. Liquid hydrogen is about 25% more efficient (455 vs. 363 vacuum Isp) but is much less dense than liquid methane; so a hydrogen rocket needs to be larger and insulated. A smaller lighter rocket helps makes up for the lower specific impulse.
You're forgetting that you need oxygen as well, which is derived from the CO2 taken from the atmosphere. So yes, bring hydrogen to Mars, but it's 1/20th the total mass; not 1/4th. 95% of the mass is found in situ.
http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sabatier_reaction#Manufacturing_propellant_on_Mars
I've used the MS Natural 4000 at work for several years now (5 keyboards on my desk, 2 used daily) and 1 at home for gaming. None of my work keyboards have decals have worn off. Most of the keys are shiny though. My keyboard at home has the W key worn off though from moving forward in games. If you're looking down at the keyboard for keys that wear out the fastest, you're not touch-typing.