Frequency regulation is required even where power is mostly provided by fossil or nuclear as demand can vary quickly. There are a few trends that have reduced the requirement from domestic consumers such as fragmentation of TV habits, though.
You raise a good point, as you could effectively do a DOS on a firm's human customer service staff, giving real customers a poor impression of a company.
Numbers like these? https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/.... I'll cut to the chase, as the employer table is at the end: 68.6% employer-based coverage in 1970, 61.6% in 2007. This is not an increase. It also hides a reduction in the extent of the coverage for many.
We yeah, if you choose exclude most of the income increases, you don't have much income increase left.
As the Pew article you linked mentioned, benefits have increased 60% in the last 15 years, partly due to tax changes. The wages you cite used to be used to pay for medical care, child care, etc. Employer-covered medical (which is not included in hourly wages) has increased 79%.
The trend in recent decades has been toward tax-free compensation such as medical, dental, HSA and FSA, 401k matching, etc. Nearly half of my compensation is various tax-advantaged accounts rather than wages.
According to the CBO, between 1979 and 2011, gross median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose from $59,400 to $75,200, or 26.5%. However, once adjusted for household size, after-tax real median household income grew 46%.
The number of positions that come with medical benefits is falling. The value of 401k benefits (which you include) is lower than old defined benefit pensions (which you do not). Neither trends support your case.
The CBO report is looking at a different statistic. It represents, to a large extent, women having better paid jobs, and not, as your original contention, overall pay increasing. In terms of by family size, that largely represents a reduction in the number of children per couple, not an increase in pay. Some also represents longer hours.
Analog typically records the entire signal, limited only by the frequency response of the microphone, plus random noise. Digital meanwhile discards much of the input signal by introducing quantization noise.
The typical vinyl record is more tightly bandpassed than a CD. If it was not sent through an HPF then if you played organ music the needle would skip out of the groove. If it was not sent through an LPF then the needle would overheat. So what you said is very, very incorrect.
So you have never had a program use too many resources and bring the system to a crawl. Yes, you can configure the OS to constrain programs in various ways, but containerisation or virtualisation is a fairly quick way to do it, provided the OS constrains the resources used by the VM or container.
There are many bands now that will happily sell you physical things along with your CD, or whatever, such as books, and all sorts of other physical presentation material. You can also buy the vinyl with a complimentary FLAC, in some instances, so you can have the vinyl but not ruin it by playing it.
Pre-filter? You can do it after the fact, either by 'reamping' (sending the signal out to a tape head and recording it back with the non-linearity desired), or spend some money on a plugin for an industry standard DAW to do it, which is how 'authentic' tape sounds are often done today, and few are any the wiser. Doing it later means that if you overcook the saturation on the final mix you can dial it back. If you commit to tape, you can't. The other option is to split the signal and record digitally as a back up, and to tape.
I have read around the issue in the past. A single geologist's opinion is being quoted on Wikipedia, but many share that opinion. The suggestion that it is exploitable may eventually be true, but it's probably only economic if oil is over $100 a barrel in current dollars. It may not even be capable of producing more energy than it takes to extract, in which case it would be useful only as a store of excess energy from other sources (wind, hydro, etc.) for niche transportation requirements, compared to electric, or as a source of chemical feedstock. Whether you are talking oil, or renewables, it is wise not to be too panglossian.
Did you read the last sentence of the first paragraph, which suggests the detailed techniques do not exist. If you read something, read it all, not just the parts that agree with your opinion.
Frequency regulation is required even where power is mostly provided by fossil or nuclear as demand can vary quickly. There are a few trends that have reduced the requirement from domestic consumers such as fragmentation of TV habits, though.
No, it's not the same technology.
You raise a good point, as you could effectively do a DOS on a firm's human customer service staff, giving real customers a poor impression of a company.
Green or red ink too FTW.
Eliza was handcrafted, but presumably this is not, so it's qualitatively different.
It's AIA in Canada.
I'm horrified by the horrifying reaction. It's all quite horrific.
I've seen stand ups tell worse jokes, so I wouldn't necessarily say it was a non-joke.
Numbers like these? https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/.... I'll cut to the chase, as the employer table is at the end: 68.6% employer-based coverage in 1970, 61.6% in 2007. This is not an increase. It also hides a reduction in the extent of the coverage for many.
It had LVM when I installed an RC.
Apparently it can be economic at $50/barrel.
That's shale oil, not oil shale. Different things.
We yeah, if you choose exclude most of the income increases, you don't have much income increase left.
As the Pew article you linked mentioned, benefits have increased 60% in the last 15 years, partly due to tax changes. The wages you cite used to be used to pay for medical care, child care, etc. Employer-covered medical (which is not included in hourly wages) has increased 79%.
The trend in recent decades has been toward tax-free compensation such as medical, dental, HSA and FSA, 401k matching, etc. Nearly half of my compensation is various tax-advantaged accounts rather than wages.
According to the CBO, between 1979 and 2011, gross median household income, adjusted for inflation, rose from $59,400 to $75,200, or 26.5%. However, once adjusted for household size, after-tax real median household income grew 46%.
The number of positions that come with medical benefits is falling. The value of 401k benefits (which you include) is lower than old defined benefit pensions (which you do not). Neither trends support your case.
The CBO report is looking at a different statistic. It represents, to a large extent, women having better paid jobs, and not, as your original contention, overall pay increasing. In terms of by family size, that largely represents a reduction in the number of children per couple, not an increase in pay. Some also represents longer hours.
They can't afford houses. They are making shelters out of vinyl,
Analog typically records the entire signal, limited only by the frequency response of the microphone, plus random noise. Digital meanwhile discards much of the input signal by introducing quantization noise.
The typical vinyl record is more tightly bandpassed than a CD. If it was not sent through an HPF then if you played organ music the needle would skip out of the groove. If it was not sent through an LPF then the needle would overheat. So what you said is very, very incorrect.
Are the stereotypical old ladies of the future going to monitor their Neighbors app instead of a police scanner?
The popular Australian soap opera has an app now?
I've had it working directly on an old laptop, and it wasn't too bad. This was to see if my wife might have wanted a Chromebook.
So you have never had a program use too many resources and bring the system to a crawl. Yes, you can configure the OS to constrain programs in various ways, but containerisation or virtualisation is a fairly quick way to do it, provided the OS constrains the resources used by the VM or container.
There are many bands now that will happily sell you physical things along with your CD, or whatever, such as books, and all sorts of other physical presentation material. You can also buy the vinyl with a complimentary FLAC, in some instances, so you can have the vinyl but not ruin it by playing it.
The waveforms are drastically the same.
Pre-filter? You can do it after the fact, either by 'reamping' (sending the signal out to a tape head and recording it back with the non-linearity desired), or spend some money on a plugin for an industry standard DAW to do it, which is how 'authentic' tape sounds are often done today, and few are any the wiser. Doing it later means that if you overcook the saturation on the final mix you can dial it back. If you commit to tape, you can't. The other option is to split the signal and record digitally as a back up, and to tape.
For once, I agree with you!
I have read around the issue in the past. A single geologist's opinion is being quoted on Wikipedia, but many share that opinion. The suggestion that it is exploitable may eventually be true, but it's probably only economic if oil is over $100 a barrel in current dollars. It may not even be capable of producing more energy than it takes to extract, in which case it would be useful only as a store of excess energy from other sources (wind, hydro, etc.) for niche transportation requirements, compared to electric, or as a source of chemical feedstock. Whether you are talking oil, or renewables, it is wise not to be too panglossian.
http://www.pewresearch.org/fac...
Did you read the last sentence of the first paragraph, which suggests the detailed techniques do not exist. If you read something, read it all, not just the parts that agree with your opinion.
If SkyNet is relying on JavaScript an attack on any one of five dozen servers it is downloading vital code from will defeat it.