A steel-frame pyramid in a desert has three advantages over a mountain. First, the chimney effect is better when there's more air heated. Second, it gets hot in deserts and there's a lot of sun, vs. snow-covered and cloud-draped mountains. Third, heavy precipitation and forests don't cover deserts and serve the surrounding areas with abundant water and oxygen.
Release the boxes without controllers this year then release a deluxe edition with controllers next year. I have a keyboard, mouse, and a gamepad all of which speak USB just fine. Mark up the controllers and sell them separately, too, if they are so much better.
Are they using florescent lamps? I thought I read somewhere they were using LEDs. LEDs typically contain no mercury.
The actual Fujitsu link is almost a year old original press release and has about as much information.
I'm not sure where I got the LED reference from, though, as looking back I don't see it in either the release or the article. Maybe I skimmed it in a previous comment.
Even if this problem is actually solved, the cryptographic methods using it were sufficient "until now" if this is actually the first party solving it. Saying that they were presumed sufficient until now misses the point of cryptography. It's never impossible to recover the plaintext. The whole point is to make it take unfeasibly long with current methods except for those with the proper key. If a new method comes along to break a scheme, that means the scheme is no longer sufficient going forward. It doesn't mean it was insufficient in the past.
I used to deal with cleaning up the aftermath of the SEA daily. I see no evidence of nation state intelligence agency backing. They're mostly script kiddie exploits. They hit vulnerable older versions of popular software like WordPress and its plugins. Then they upload PHP web shells that are basically no different from r57 or c99. Spidershell would an improvement. Before the civil war they typically defaced sites with new pages decrying Israel's existence and calling for others to join them in defacing sites. Every other site defacing operation was basically the same or better.
I think saying that all the protestors are Russians is probably an exaggeration. I would imagine that some Russians are rallying a larger group of Ukrainians. Namely, it would be those who were happy with Yanukovych and his plan of being independent but closer to Russia than to NATO and the EU. I imagine most of the Ukrainians even in the supposedly breakaway areas prefer to remain Ukrainian, though. Maybe they'd like to have a little more local influence, but independence is not necessary for that. Joining another, larger nation is counter to it.
That's true, but what if someone buys a small order? It wouldn't be difficult to tamper with 3 routers and two switches going to Bob's Data Warehouse, LLC.
Um, no. You wouldn't change the price retroactively. Once it's available you'd change the price for the next person to take it. Changing the price on the available spots doesn't change the price on the taken spots.
Where is it lossy? Is it lossy on storage, or on retrieval? More to the point, does retrieving it store it again? Being lossy at a certain point is not the same as degrading to a point of zero data recovery. This isn't computers or biology. It's basic logic.
The city has infrastructure potential. They can publish the open spots and the spots can have actual meters. The meters could even update prices hourly or quarter hourly with demand.
Which is wrong, unless you read it with information loss and then store the retrieved version with more information loss. If information is lost on storage it does not mean it is lost on retrieval. If it is lost on retrieval it does not mean it is lost on storage. Even if it's lost on both actions, it does not degrade the stored version more unless you remove it and re-store it.
Many birds fly 18 hours straight. Some species longer.
Cornellhas some information you may want to read, as do someothersources. Birds fly before sunrise and after sunset, even in complete darkness. Some species fly right through the night during migration.
Valet stands generally get permits to do that if they are doing it on public spaces. If not, then they should be. If it's not required where you are, then it should be.
You would be selling access to the space, which is not yours to sell. You can't loiter (which is a law in most cities on its own) specifically to deny access to a public resource to the public.
According to the BBC summary they also orient according to the sun and stars. This disrupts one of three systems. In the US, there's some decent evidence that major landmarks like rivers and lakes are used even by birds that are not water birds, too. It's certainly not a huge problem for most migratory birds. Lack of food sources at their traditional migration times may be much more important.
I think the delay is more likely. Nobody is going to sell a spot they need. They'll sell it to someone else, and then have to stay around until the buyer arrives. You can't sell it to someone and then just leave, allowing some third party to take the spot you sold.
And that's the crux of the problem -- it's public parking, so you have no right to keep someone from parking in it. It's not yours, so you can't sell it. Selling that which one does not own is fraud.
It's not as simple as that. One could buy Dogecoin in the US with US dollars, send it to someone in France, sell it to someone in Germany, buy Bitcoin in Euros, send those to someone in Iran or Syria, sell them for whatever currency, and hand that currency over to whoever. The US or France would have very little control at the far end of the (people, not block-) chain. To get at the Link 0 in the US they would have to prove that Link 0 knew where that cash would end up and what would be done with it on the other end of the chain of custody of the money.
At freecode.com they have a few tools regarding language. It's a public release site and not just whatever someone is working on at the moment. The uploader allows people to specify which language something is in. There's a link to those counts and then to projects in those languages right on the front page of the site. However, it's often helpful to know with which languages things are meant to interoperate or process, too. Freshmeat... err, Freecode allows one to search projects. There are counts there different from the "implementation language" set for the projects.
The JVM is even one of the three primary targets for Rakudo, the main Perl6 front end. It is increasingly feature complete. So if that ever ships it'll be another interoperable JVM production language.
A steel-frame pyramid in a desert has three advantages over a mountain. First, the chimney effect is better when there's more air heated. Second, it gets hot in deserts and there's a lot of sun, vs. snow-covered and cloud-draped mountains. Third, heavy precipitation and forests don't cover deserts and serve the surrounding areas with abundant water and oxygen.
Release the boxes without controllers this year then release a deluxe edition with controllers next year. I have a keyboard, mouse, and a gamepad all of which speak USB just fine. Mark up the controllers and sell them separately, too, if they are so much better.
Maybe it's a dumb mouse never quite finding the source of the pheremone trail it's following.
Are they using florescent lamps? I thought I read somewhere they were using LEDs. LEDs typically contain no mercury.
The actual Fujitsu link is almost a year old original press release and has about as much information.
I'm not sure where I got the LED reference from, though, as looking back I don't see it in either the release or the article. Maybe I skimmed it in a previous comment.
Even if this problem is actually solved, the cryptographic methods using it were sufficient "until now" if this is actually the first party solving it. Saying that they were presumed sufficient until now misses the point of cryptography. It's never impossible to recover the plaintext. The whole point is to make it take unfeasibly long with current methods except for those with the proper key. If a new method comes along to break a scheme, that means the scheme is no longer sufficient going forward. It doesn't mean it was insufficient in the past.
I used to deal with cleaning up the aftermath of the SEA daily. I see no evidence of nation state intelligence agency backing. They're mostly script kiddie exploits. They hit vulnerable older versions of popular software like WordPress and its plugins. Then they upload PHP web shells that are basically no different from r57 or c99. Spidershell would an improvement. Before the civil war they typically defaced sites with new pages decrying Israel's existence and calling for others to join them in defacing sites. Every other site defacing operation was basically the same or better.
I think saying that all the protestors are Russians is probably an exaggeration. I would imagine that some Russians are rallying a larger group of Ukrainians. Namely, it would be those who were happy with Yanukovych and his plan of being independent but closer to Russia than to NATO and the EU. I imagine most of the Ukrainians even in the supposedly breakaway areas prefer to remain Ukrainian, though. Maybe they'd like to have a little more local influence, but independence is not necessary for that. Joining another, larger nation is counter to it.
That's true, but what if someone buys a small order? It wouldn't be difficult to tamper with 3 routers and two switches going to Bob's Data Warehouse, LLC.
Surely the NSA can touch anything that Customs does.
It should be fairly basic for the meter to tell if there is a two ton lump of metal in a space. Meters are already widely networked.
Oh my... yes, this! It's too bad my mod points expired.
Um, no. You wouldn't change the price retroactively. Once it's available you'd change the price for the next person to take it. Changing the price on the available spots doesn't change the price on the taken spots.
Where is it lossy? Is it lossy on storage, or on retrieval? More to the point, does retrieving it store it again? Being lossy at a certain point is not the same as degrading to a point of zero data recovery. This isn't computers or biology. It's basic logic.
The city has infrastructure potential. They can publish the open spots and the spots can have actual meters. The meters could even update prices hourly or quarter hourly with demand.
Which is wrong, unless you read it with information loss and then store the retrieved version with more information loss. If information is lost on storage it does not mean it is lost on retrieval. If it is lost on retrieval it does not mean it is lost on storage. Even if it's lost on both actions, it does not degrade the stored version more unless you remove it and re-store it.
5) fork the distro of your choice and build all packages with smarter dependencies (or to depend on the packages of your choice)
What the city should do is populate a map of available spaces.
Many birds fly 18 hours straight. Some species longer.
Cornell has some information you may want to read, as do some other sources. Birds fly before sunrise and after sunset, even in complete darkness. Some species fly right through the night during migration.
Valet stands generally get permits to do that if they are doing it on public spaces. If not, then they should be. If it's not required where you are, then it should be.
You would be selling access to the space, which is not yours to sell. You can't loiter (which is a law in most cities on its own) specifically to deny access to a public resource to the public.
According to the BBC summary they also orient according to the sun and stars. This disrupts one of three systems. In the US, there's some decent evidence that major landmarks like rivers and lakes are used even by birds that are not water birds, too. It's certainly not a huge problem for most migratory birds. Lack of food sources at their traditional migration times may be much more important.
I think the delay is more likely. Nobody is going to sell a spot they need. They'll sell it to someone else, and then have to stay around until the buyer arrives. You can't sell it to someone and then just leave, allowing some third party to take the spot you sold.
And that's the crux of the problem -- it's public parking, so you have no right to keep someone from parking in it. It's not yours, so you can't sell it. Selling that which one does not own is fraud.
It's not as simple as that. One could buy Dogecoin in the US with US dollars, send it to someone in France, sell it to someone in Germany, buy Bitcoin in Euros, send those to someone in Iran or Syria, sell them for whatever currency, and hand that currency over to whoever. The US or France would have very little control at the far end of the (people, not block-) chain. To get at the Link 0 in the US they would have to prove that Link 0 knew where that cash would end up and what would be done with it on the other end of the chain of custody of the money.
At freecode.com they have a few tools regarding language. It's a public release site and not just whatever someone is working on at the moment. The uploader allows people to specify which language something is in. There's a link to those counts and then to projects in those languages right on the front page of the site. However, it's often helpful to know with which languages things are meant to interoperate or process, too. Freshmeat... err, Freecode allows one to search projects. There are counts there different from the "implementation language" set for the projects.
http://freecode.com/search?q=P... 2416
http://freecode.com/search?q=C... 3632
http://freecode.com/search?q='... also 3632
http://freecode.com/search?q=J... 3967
http://freecode.com/search?q=R... 402
http://freecode.com/search?q=P... 1920
http://freecode.com/search?q=J... 921
I'm not sure if searches for "Java" include "JavaScript" or if the search box is smarter than that. It seems to lump C and C++ together.
The JVM is even one of the three primary targets for Rakudo, the main Perl6 front end. It is increasingly feature complete. So if that ever ships it'll be another interoperable JVM production language.