The main motivation for Chinese to want to go abroad is to escape the hot smoggy climate, and move somewhere cool and green. They love the UK for this reason. When they can't see the skies for the pollution, the government has no option to act. Just do an image search for pollution in China. Those pictures look like something out of a dystopian futureworld.
They sorted this problem out in East Menlo Park by asking the local research groups (NASA?) if they could do anything. They came up with a "gunshot detector" which triangulated or quadratulated the location of the shot and the type of weapon. Everything from someone clapping their hands, a car backfiring or a real gunshot could be identified.
Xeon motherboards can have one two or four CPU sockets; that's the number scheme for Xeon processors. The first number is how many processors can be used together eg. Xeon 2660 is two processor sockets, Xeon 4116 allows four processors on the same motherboard. Each CPU can have anything from a couple of cores to over a hundred, with each being hyperthreaded as well. So having a simple "number of sockets" doesn't affect anyone but the home programmer wanting to learn desktop HPC.
I've seen ISP's offer virtualized servers, server pools and cloud systems arranged in "droplets, cloudlets" and any other hipster name for dynamically increasing capacity based on demand.
It's like those last minute ticket websites. In the past, if you wanted a restaurant or a hotel room for a conference at the last minute, you could only phone round so many hotels. You might have a search strategy based on the distance from the venue or being close to a train line, but you had to take what was available and they would jack up the rates if they knew you were going for the conference rather than a holiday. With the website, you have the whole range of all hotels searched instantly and anonymously. That helped drive down prices since supply exceeded demand.
In the past, I've experienced the price gouging by high street office supply stores. One place tried to charge me £80 for a pack of 10 pre-formatted 3.5" floppy disks. When mail-order office supply shops became popular those stores had to cut their prices to something sensible.
It would make Liveleaks the largest provider of online terror-porn. British newspapers will lose the ability to make articles out of terrorists getting blown up by their opponents.
What constitutes a terrorist video anyway.. Does it require someone singing badly out of tune with some Arabic text scrolling along the bottom. Are video clips of guns, tanks, and fighters necessary? Or does it require gory violence of real world events?
The optic nerves actually cross over at the front of the brain. This is required to implement the brainware equivalent of Fourier transforms and signal processing (photometric stereo, edge detection, distance estimation).
It's estimated that the brain is arranged into around 1500 "cortical units" each of which contribute to about 130 different purposes (like being able to understand a story, identify concave regions in space, like hallways or cupboards). So it's really more a supercomputer than a multi-core CPU's. Diffusion MRI gives up a layout of http://static.wixstatic.com/media/0eecff_7acaecfbb8c04605baa48ff8454004ff.jpg
The hardest part is keeping everything in synchronization. That's solved by having brainwaves.
It really depends on the standard of the hardware, whether it supports supervisors, hypervisors, or infinitevisors. Replace SNES with Linux OS, and the statement is false. "It's impossible to emulate a Linux OS within a Linux OS, therefore Linux OS emulation is impossible.
I read they worked from 7am to 11am and 1pm to 5pm. Sunrise and sunset at the equator are at 6am and 6pm, with a sharp change from night-time to day-time. Noon-time is too hot to work, so they would have lunch then. There were studies on the food consumption; beer and bread. They actually optimized these two processes by noticing that the lightly baked dough was also used to make the beer mash, and that the froth from the beer went back into the dough.
The hanging gardens of Babylon used Archimedes screws. Egyptians must have used water in order to keep the dust down and keep the workers hydrated as well as used them for canal boats.
The petition provided accurate information. The FCC turned down the request to add booster AM transmitters, because they considered the introduction of "experimental stations" a backdoor way of extending the broadcast license of the station.
"Blanco-Pi argues that he should be allowed to have a greater coverage area for the programming broadcast over his existing full-power stations, in part because he believes his programming to be superior to his competitors'"
"establishment of a new AM booster station merely to extend the service of an existing AM station impermissibly circumvents our commercial AM filing window and competitive bidding processes."
The FCC got all high and mighty about defending their commercial licensing. Because they require a license for every transmitter, requesting a new booster station requires extending a commercial transmitter license.
Many users are like that; Artists think Photoshop is the desktop environment, because the TD set it up to start in fullscreen mode. Animators think the same about their art packages.
Very true, I have a gaming laptop. The Bigfoot Wi-Fi chip doesn't work with Linux. Nor is the keyboard backlight, or audio. A dinky little touchpad doesn't work either - that requires X-Windows voodoo to support multiple pointers (which Ive tried and made the display unstable), which still doesn't work either way.
Many other standardized things do work; USB drives, external HDD's, keyboards, but it's those outlier products that are the problem.
Then it seem we just need thousands of small servers, each of which back up random subsets of each others data, and performs a small amount of search queries.
There's a good few smaller tectonic plates underwater. It is also suspected that a couple other continental sized plates ended up being crumpled up inside the mantle layers.
I miss my old Saisho Walkman - for me, it was the iPod of the time, had detachable speakers, play music on cassettes, had FM/AM radio reception and could fit inside my pocket if I removed one speaker. Could wear headphones or listen to the music from the speaker.
When three solar masses are converted from mass into pure energy (E = m . C^2) , that's a tremendous amount of energy. Mass/Inertia is due to the attraction of the quantum foam to atomic nucleii. When those nucleii disappear and all that mass is converted into photons, the stretched space time contracts and expands. Anything with mass (protons, neutrons and electrons) has inertia, while photons don;t have mass/
Similar to the way tectonic plates creating a tsunami. Imagine the three ends of each detector are beach balls floating on a ocean. So long as the ocean is calm, these will stay in place. Whenever a wave rolls by. the distance between those balls will change.
The gravity wave moves at the speed of light. By the time it reaches Earth, the displacement is one thousandth of the diameter of an atomic nucleus.
Makes me wonder why we shouldn't see gravity waves creating refractive distortions in the surrounding space, much the same way that explosions do on Earth
The main motivation for Chinese to want to go abroad is to escape the hot smoggy climate, and move somewhere cool and green. They love the UK for this reason. When they can't see the skies for the pollution, the government has no option to act. Just do an image search for pollution in China. Those pictures look like something out of a dystopian futureworld.
http://static4.businessinsider...
http://www.museumofthecity.org...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/ima...
https://i.guim.co.uk/img/stati...
On a clear day:
http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multi...
They sorted this problem out in East Menlo Park by asking the local research groups (NASA?) if they could do anything. They came up with a "gunshot detector" which triangulated or quadratulated the location of the shot and the type of weapon. Everything from someone clapping their hands, a car backfiring or a real gunshot could be identified.
What's the plural of Grammar Nazi? A Blitzkrieg of Grammar Nazi's?
Just cover your vehicle in LED lights and smartphone CCD's
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
Better still - link to all those Youtube videos on those science subjects. They explain things in clear, simple, animations.
They used to call that "UNIX prices". Want a heavy duty RS-232 cable to go between your UNIX server and your line printer? $120
Xeon motherboards can have one two or four CPU sockets; that's the number scheme for Xeon processors. The first number is how many processors can be used together eg. Xeon 2660 is two processor sockets, Xeon 4116 allows four processors on the same motherboard. Each CPU can have anything from a couple of cores to over a hundred, with each being hyperthreaded as well. So having a simple "number of sockets" doesn't affect anyone but the home programmer wanting to learn desktop HPC.
I've seen ISP's offer virtualized servers, server pools and cloud systems arranged in "droplets, cloudlets" and any other hipster name for dynamically increasing capacity based on demand.
It's like those last minute ticket websites. In the past, if you wanted a restaurant or a hotel room for a conference at the last minute, you could only phone round so many hotels. You might have a search strategy based on the distance from the venue or being close to a train line, but you had to take what was available and they would jack up the rates if they knew you were going for the conference rather than a holiday. With the website, you have the whole range of all hotels searched instantly and anonymously. That helped drive down prices since supply exceeded demand.
In the past, I've experienced the price gouging by high street office supply stores. One place tried to charge me £80 for a pack of 10 pre-formatted 3.5" floppy disks. When mail-order office supply shops became popular those stores had to cut their prices to something sensible.
It would make Liveleaks the largest provider of online terror-porn. British newspapers will lose the ability to make articles out of terrorists getting blown up by their opponents.
What constitutes a terrorist video anyway.. Does it require someone singing badly out of tune with some Arabic text scrolling along the bottom. Are video clips of guns, tanks, and fighters necessary? Or does it require gory violence of real world events?
The optic nerves actually cross over at the front of the brain. This is required to implement the brainware equivalent of Fourier transforms and signal processing (photometric stereo, edge detection, distance estimation).
It's estimated that the brain is arranged into around 1500 "cortical units" each of which contribute to about 130 different purposes (like being able to understand a story, identify concave regions in space, like hallways or cupboards). So it's really more a supercomputer than a multi-core CPU's. Diffusion MRI gives up a layout of http://static.wixstatic.com/media/0eecff_7acaecfbb8c04605baa48ff8454004ff.jpg
The hardest part is keeping everything in synchronization. That's solved by having brainwaves.
It really depends on the standard of the hardware, whether it supports supervisors, hypervisors, or infinitevisors.
Replace SNES with Linux OS, and the statement is false.
"It's impossible to emulate a Linux OS within a Linux OS, therefore Linux OS emulation is impossible.
I read they worked from 7am to 11am and 1pm to 5pm. Sunrise and sunset at the equator are at 6am and 6pm, with a sharp change from night-time to day-time. Noon-time is too hot to work, so they would have lunch then. There were studies on the food consumption; beer and bread. They actually optimized these two processes by noticing that the lightly baked dough was also used to make the beer mash, and that the froth from the beer went back into the dough.
http://www.aeraweb.org/lost-ci...
https://cosmosmagazine.com/physics/time-crystals-latest-quantum-weirdness
Get those toy parrots you see in the supermarket and get them to issue Alexa commands. Though it would be fun if you could give them Alexa commands.
The hanging gardens of Babylon used Archimedes screws. Egyptians must have used water in order to keep the dust down and keep the workers hydrated as well as used them for canal boats.
The petition provided accurate information. The FCC turned down the request to add booster AM transmitters, because they considered the introduction of "experimental stations" a backdoor way of extending the broadcast license of the station.
"Blanco-Pi argues that he should be allowed to have a greater coverage area for the programming broadcast over his existing full-power stations, in part because he believes his programming to be superior to his competitors'"
"establishment of a new AM booster station merely to extend the service of an existing AM station impermissibly circumvents our commercial AM filing window and competitive bidding processes."
The FCC got all high and mighty about defending their commercial licensing. Because they require a license for every transmitter, requesting a new booster station requires extending a commercial transmitter license.
Many users are like that; Artists think Photoshop is the desktop environment, because the TD set it up to start in fullscreen mode. Animators think the same about their art packages.
Very true, I have a gaming laptop. The Bigfoot Wi-Fi chip doesn't work with Linux. Nor is the keyboard backlight, or audio. A dinky little touchpad doesn't work either - that requires X-Windows voodoo to support multiple pointers (which Ive tried and made the display unstable), which still doesn't work either way.
Many other standardized things do work; USB drives, external HDD's, keyboards, but it's those outlier products that are the problem.
Then it seem we just need thousands of small servers, each of which back up random subsets of each others data, and performs a small amount of search queries.
There's a good few smaller tectonic plates underwater. It is also suspected that a couple other continental sized plates ended up being crumpled up inside the mantle layers.
https://www.theguardian.com/sc...
https://confit.atlas.jp/guide/...
I miss my old Saisho Walkman - for me, it was the iPod of the time, had detachable speakers, play music on cassettes, had FM/AM radio reception and could fit inside my pocket if I removed one speaker. Could wear headphones or listen to the music from the speaker.
Android phones in Europe use the earphone socket cable as an antenna - No external antenna
When three solar masses are converted from mass into pure energy (E = m . C^2) , that's a tremendous amount of energy. Mass/Inertia is due to the attraction of the quantum foam to atomic nucleii. When those nucleii disappear and all that mass is converted into photons, the stretched space time contracts and expands.
Anything with mass (protons, neutrons and electrons) has inertia, while photons don;t have mass/
Similar to the way tectonic plates creating a tsunami. Imagine the three ends of each detector are beach balls floating on a ocean. So long as the ocean is calm, these will stay in place. Whenever a wave rolls by. the distance between those balls will change.
The gravity wave moves at the speed of light. By the time it reaches Earth, the displacement is one thousandth of the diameter of an atomic nucleus.
Makes me wonder why we shouldn't see gravity waves creating refractive distortions in the surrounding space, much the same way that explosions do on Earth