Mind sharing what is that wonderful ISP you found?
And since you are posting as AC, you might as well share the general location where this 3x faster speed is available at 70% of the price. It could be of help to others who are fed up with the Rogers and Bell duopoly.
Again, the two first videos are on snow/ice. You can't even see the tires in the first one, and the third one specifically indicates at the start that is on "Wet tarmac"
Viewing them did bring up an equally important factor that I left out. Just as standard ABS help to brake in these conditions, Tesla obviously handle detection of loss of static friction and compensates during acceleration as well.
I don't want to take anything away from Tesla - this is a good thing, but it is not in line with the original assertion, and I have yet to see one of these 'tug-o-war' on dry tar.
Conditions are icy in this video, and while you can claim that both the truck and the car are subject to the same conditions, the most important factor in those conditions are the condition and type of tires.
Coincidentally, I learned about Postgresql after spending countless man hours trying to do things with Oracle the hard way.
Linking to C for instance; Oracle's way of doing this was to use a preprocessor that generated large amount of untraceable code. Postgres just had a proper API implemented in a library.
Hello, I am Quantor Prince and have been stranded in entanglement after secret experiment from my captors. I have made causality agreement with guard who is willing to free and not free me for the sum..
Classic 101 White Buckling Spring USB.
It has none of the Windows keys, which always throws the "Microsoft Support" scammers for a loop when they tell me to press it. "No, I am not using a Mac!"
My only, but stern critique, is that they use very deep hexagonal screws in the back, which makes it difficult for most to open and clean.
"The main point of C/C++ is write once compile anywhere."
Since when?
If you have new or different hardware you simply have to deal with it.
The C++ language Standard doesn't deal with specific hardware abstraction.
It is the same as C. You have to deal with new/different hardware, and it is not because "the default core sets wasn't robust eno
ugh for many actions".
CUDA is an API written by Nvidia.
Hardware manufactures do not have strong incentives to write libraries that will work for their competitors, hence where lies your issue.
Are you specifically talking about the Steam Client?
For some of the games, they seem like wrapped Playstation, XBox and even DOS games with Windows "mannerism", wrapping themselves alongside a 'shoddy' keyboard/ controller interface, that may or may not break during the next Steam update.
Perhaps running on Linux will bring new issues, but it may fix others such as Windows dialogs taking focus away from your games and asking you the same question over and over, despite checking the box that says "Never ask me this question again".
That usually causes your heavily armed beloved alter ego game character to suffer.
They would presumably use the buttons below the screen.', or whatever needs to be done would be from ground control.
Why would "you need to operate it with something other than...". Are strapped in cosmonauts getting their suits shredded off, or their fingers cut in that scenario?
The laws impose restrictions, but not a limit it in the sense that there is no way around by adding more money; ie: build water ponds where the heat is allowed to rise much higher temperatures (without being returned to a river).
That would make the initial cost of building the plant less appealing by building upfront for a scenario that hasn't occurred yet.
"Objectives:
Acquire a worldwide, highly available, exponentially elastic, secure, resilient cloud
computing and storage environment that seamlessly extends from the homefront to the tactical edge."..
Maybe it was the 'exponential elasticity', or perhaps the DOD felt like Oracle didn't "extend to the tactical edge" enough.
Do you define space as "beyond Earth's atmosphere", or "the three-dimentional extent that includes the earth, stars, galaxies, pulsars etc?
In the later, space is considered mostly void and doesn't have a background temperature. You also cannot transfer heat to it. Radiation can move through it, and that is energy, but not heat, at least until that energy gets absorbed by matter (which could be gaz of course).
There is a CMB (cosmic microwave background, supposedly from the Big-Bang) and because cosmologists (among others) are interested in measuring these things, they use an 'ideal physical body', or 'black body' to express how much heat would result from all the energy being perfectly absorbed.
In this respect the AC was correct, and space is not 'cold' in the same sense that it can be hot. There is no heat because there is no matter, or at least not enough to transfer heat to (less than 0.1 atom/cm^3).
That said, I don't think we have to worry about getting anywhere close to one of these hot spots you mentioned (ie: Sagittarius A).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
(Skip past 3:37)
"They still managed to completely dominate the BSD desktop market"
That statement doesn't mean anything and the following one is baseless.
That $100/month is misleading. Price increases will creep up every other month, until it is at least over $160.
Mind sharing what is that wonderful ISP you found?
And since you are posting as AC, you might as well share the general location where this 3x faster speed is available at 70% of the price. It could be of help to others who are fed up with the Rogers and Bell duopoly.
Again, the two first videos are on snow/ice. You can't even see the tires in the first one, and the third one specifically indicates at the start that is on "Wet tarmac"
Viewing them did bring up an equally important factor that I left out. Just as standard ABS help to brake in these conditions, Tesla obviously handle detection of loss of static friction and compensates during acceleration as well.
I don't want to take anything away from Tesla - this is a good thing, but it is not in line with the original assertion, and I have yet to see one of these 'tug-o-war' on dry tar.
Cool, but the test is not that clear.
Conditions are icy in this video, and while you can claim that both the truck and the car are subject to the same conditions, the most important factor in those conditions are the condition and type of tires.
We have no data on that.
I don't want to ruin the drama, but what if both sexes got off Twitter?
A better guess would be that some plants do it better than others, for example if they evolved in areas with higher concentration of organic gasses.
They likely isolated the genes of interest, clipped the DNA and plugged it into something better suited for the living room.
Coincidentally, I learned about Postgresql after spending countless man hours trying to do things with Oracle the hard way.
Linking to C for instance; Oracle's way of doing this was to use a preprocessor that generated large amount of untraceable code. Postgres just had a proper API implemented in a library.
You do not have to be an 'urban sophisticate' to believe in the scientific method.
Hello, I am Quantor Prince and have been stranded in entanglement after secret experiment from my captors. I have made causality agreement with guard who is willing to free and not free me for the sum ..
Classic 101 White Buckling Spring USB. It has none of the Windows keys, which always throws the "Microsoft Support" scammers for a loop when they tell me to press it. "No, I am not using a Mac!" My only, but stern critique, is that they use very deep hexagonal screws in the back, which makes it difficult for most to open and clean.
".. whether antimatter falls down .."
Or maybe it falls up?
His experiences have value and I believe there is something to what he is saying.
You judge the value of his opinion based on age alone and offer condescension, which leads me to think that at his age, he is already better than you.
Just think of how much better than you he will be in a decade.
"Confidential files aren't lost on laptops in the back of taxis"
Indeed they are not. They are lost Instantly.
Yes.
https://wiki.tiker.net/CudaVsO...
https://create.pro/blog/opencl...
"The main point of C/C++ is write once compile anywhere."
Since when?
If you have new or different hardware you simply have to deal with it.
The C++ language Standard doesn't deal with specific hardware abstraction.
It is the same as C. You have to deal with new/different hardware, and it is not because "the default core sets wasn't robust eno ugh for many actions".
CUDA is an API written by Nvidia.
Hardware manufactures do not have strong incentives to write libraries that will work for their competitors, hence where lies your issue.
Are you specifically talking about the Steam Client?
For some of the games, they seem like wrapped Playstation, XBox and even DOS games with Windows "mannerism", wrapping themselves alongside a 'shoddy' keyboard/ controller interface, that may or may not break during the next Steam update.
Perhaps running on Linux will bring new issues, but it may fix others such as Windows dialogs taking focus away from your games and asking you the same question over and over, despite checking the box that says "Never ask me this question again".
That usually causes your heavily armed beloved alter ego game character to suffer.
Absolutely.
I intend to run the same Steam games on both (dual boot) and keep my options open.
Of course, Steam must have done some of their own. They likely would not be doing this otherwise.
As one with a dedicated game machine that was never going to update to Windows 10, this is a very positive outcome.
A game box with Linux will be far more useful, and likely to be on more than a couple of times a week.
They would presumably use the buttons below the screen.', or whatever needs to be done would be from ground control.
Why would "you need to operate it with something other than...". Are strapped in cosmonauts getting their suits shredded off, or their fingers cut in that scenario?
"Laws limited the exisiting cooling engineering."
The laws impose restrictions, but not a limit it in the sense that there is no way around by adding more money; ie: build water ponds where the heat is allowed to rise much higher temperatures (without being returned to a river).
That would make the initial cost of building the plant less appealing by building upfront for a scenario that hasn't occurred yet.
It has now.
From the RFP link:
..
"Objectives:
Acquire a worldwide, highly available, exponentially elastic, secure, resilient cloud computing and storage environment that seamlessly extends from the homefront to the tactical edge."
Maybe it was the 'exponential elasticity', or perhaps the DOD felt like Oracle didn't "extend to the tactical edge" enough.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Actually, it seems like it is intentionally pathetic so that it would make the "liberal side" look so.
Do you define space as "beyond Earth's atmosphere", or "the three-dimentional extent that includes the earth, stars, galaxies, pulsars etc?
In the later, space is considered mostly void and doesn't have a background temperature. You also cannot transfer heat to it. Radiation can move through it, and that is energy, but not heat, at least until that energy gets absorbed by matter (which could be gaz of course).
There is a CMB (cosmic microwave background, supposedly from the Big-Bang) and because cosmologists (among others) are interested in measuring these things, they use an 'ideal physical body', or 'black body' to express how much heat would result from all the energy being perfectly absorbed.
In this respect the AC was correct, and space is not 'cold' in the same sense that it can be hot. There is no heat because there is no matter, or at least not enough to transfer heat to (less than 0.1 atom/cm^3).
That said, I don't think we have to worry about getting anywhere close to one of these hot spots you mentioned (ie: Sagittarius A).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
(Skip past 3:37)