The existence of the _same_ neuronal firing patterns when using a tool as when using one's bare hands is not "common sense", nor are "mirror neurons" and their abundance in the F5 section.
I was all set to make a point about how the hippies were right about just about everything - drugs are interesting, war is bad, love is good, we all need to lighten up a little or at least make getting blowjobs our top priority.
But I'm way to high right now to even consider it. I love you, man!
Given the _same_ coercivity of a magnetic domain, given temperature, and a given external field, I would think smaller domains should be _easier_ to flip, on average, than large domains. The nearest- and next-nearest-neighbor influences would be much larger for small domains than large ones. After all, given the scaling laws of diffusion-driven "averaging" processes, fluctuations spaced closer together always converge to an average much faster than those spaced further apart.
I _guess_ that the linked article is talking about the possibility of recovering data from the "edges" of data tracks, based on some remnant domain orientations due to the small widths of the write/erase heads. I can see how smaller domains might help retain data in that case.
From Wikinews: The "Message to Scientology" video was highlighted as the "YouTube Video of the Week" by The Michigan Daily. Commenting on the video, the piece states "if this video is any indication, it seems like the assailants mean business". Hehe. If that were a credible metric of "business", we'd have an emo President by now.
Fewer vulnerabilities "make it easier to manage risk," [Jones] says. "All other things being equal, fewer patches mean more time to spend on other security projects to reduce risk." Wow. The one guy who currently handles the code for Windows security must be quite relieved to hear that!
I haven't tried KDE4 yet (except for the Oxygen icons), but have heard a lot of complaints about the menu. Personally, I find that katapult provides a nice (my preferred) alternative to starting applications on the menu, as long as you know their name, or part of it. Unfortunately, it seems that katapult's list of programs and things is populated by running the program at least once on the command line; after that, it's available via katapult.
The equivalent functionality in Windows is provided by a nice little program called "Launchy".
Hm. Kind of like OS X v. 10.0 (from Wikipedia):
It proved to be a rocky start to the Mac OS X line, plagued with missing features and performance issues, although it was praised for being a good start to an operating system still in its infancy, in terms of completeness and overall operating system stability.
Fan: So do you like draw this or something? Banky: I ink it and I'm also the colorist. The guy next to me draws it, but we both came up with the characters. Next... Fan: (snidely) What does that mean, you ink it? Banky: Well, it means that Holden draws the pictures in pencil, and he gives it to me to go over in ink. Next... Fan: So basically you just trace. Banky: It's eh...it's not tracing, alright? I add depth and shading to give the image more definition. Only then does the drawing truely take shape. Fan: No-no-no-no, you go over what he draws with a pen. That's tracing. Banky: Not really. Next... Fan: (To next guy in the line) Hey man, let me ask you something. If somebody draws something, and you draw the exact same thing like, right on top of it, without going outside the original designated art, what do you call it? Other Fan: I dunno man, tracing? Fan: (Laughing, to Banky) See?! Banky: (Losing patience, to Other Fan) You want your book signed or what? Fan: Hey-hey-hey-hey-hey, don't get all testy with him just because you got a problem with your station in life! Banky: Oh, I'm secure with what I do. Fan: Then just say it...you're a tracer! Banky: (To Other Fan) How should I sign this? Other Fan: I don't want you to sign it man, I want the guy who draws Bluntman & Chronic to sign it. You're just a tracer. Fan: Tell him, little shaver.Collector: You're mucking with a G, you fuckin' tracer. Banky: I'll trace a chalk line around your dead fucking body, you fuck! Holden: [to Security Guards] Will you get him out of here! Collector: [as he's being dragged away by Security Guard] Hey wait a second! He jumped me, you fucking tracer! Banky: YOUR MOTHER'S A TRACER!
Your reply was a good endorsement of my post. It shows that your logic is atleast UnBiased, or atleast I hope so!! Damn. And here I was trying to show how ridiculous it is. Well, maybe next week.
Our *three* weapons are fear, surprise, and pheromones...and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope.... Our *four*...no... *Amongst* our weapons.... Amongst our weaponry...are such elements as fear, surprise....
Jeez, these jokes you people keep punnishing us with are ab-original!
Not to those of us here in New Mexico :)
Yeesh. What a crock.
Perhaps something has gone wrong with the tagging system.
The existence of the _same_ neuronal firing patterns when using a tool as when using one's bare hands is not "common sense", nor are "mirror neurons" and their abundance in the F5 section.
But I'm way to high right now to even consider it. I love you, man!
Given the _same_ coercivity of a magnetic domain, given temperature, and a given external field, I would think smaller domains should be _easier_ to flip, on average, than large domains. The nearest- and next-nearest-neighbor influences would be much larger for small domains than large ones. After all, given the scaling laws of diffusion-driven "averaging" processes, fluctuations spaced closer together always converge to an average much faster than those spaced further apart.
I _guess_ that the linked article is talking about the possibility of recovering data from the "edges" of data tracks, based on some remnant domain orientations due to the small widths of the write/erase heads. I can see how smaller domains might help retain data in that case.
It's all those screenshots of the 2010 Windows White Screen of Death which does that. Once you've added that in, nothing survives.
Hehe. Nice one. The parent is (probably) referring to http://xkcd.com/327/.
From Wikinews: The "Message to Scientology" video was highlighted as the "YouTube Video of the Week" by The Michigan Daily. Commenting on the video, the piece states "if this video is any indication, it seems like the assailants mean business". Hehe. If that were a credible metric of "business", we'd have an emo President by now.
For the last time, you just can't [...]
You must be new here.
I definitely didn't believe your statistics (not being much of a kernel coder), but Wikipedia tends to back you up: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Source_lines_of_code.
Thanks! I learned something.
I haven't tried KDE4 yet (except for the Oxygen icons), but have heard a lot of complaints about the menu. Personally, I find that katapult provides a nice (my preferred) alternative to starting applications on the menu, as long as you know their name, or part of it. Unfortunately, it seems that katapult's list of programs and things is populated by running the program at least once on the command line; after that, it's available via katapult.
The equivalent functionality in Windows is provided by a nice little program called "Launchy".
How about KTorrent and VLC?
Fan: So do you like draw this or something?
Banky: I ink it and I'm also the colorist. The guy next to me draws it, but we both came up with the characters. Next...
Fan: (snidely) What does that mean, you ink it?
Banky: Well, it means that Holden draws the pictures in pencil, and he gives it to me to go over in ink. Next...
Fan: So basically you just trace.
Banky: It's eh...it's not tracing, alright? I add depth and shading to give the image more definition. Only then does the drawing truely take shape.
Fan: No-no-no-no, you go over what he draws with a pen. That's tracing.
Banky: Not really. Next...
Fan: (To next guy in the line) Hey man, let me ask you something. If somebody draws something, and you draw the exact same thing like, right on top of it, without going outside the original designated art, what do you call it?
Other Fan: I dunno man, tracing?
Fan: (Laughing, to Banky) See?!
Banky: (Losing patience, to Other Fan) You want your book signed or what?
Fan: Hey-hey-hey-hey-hey, don't get all testy with him just because you got a problem with your station in life!
Banky: Oh, I'm secure with what I do.
Fan: Then just say it...you're a tracer!
Banky: (To Other Fan) How should I sign this?
Other Fan: I don't want you to sign it man, I want the guy who draws Bluntman & Chronic to sign it. You're just a tracer.
Fan: Tell him, little shaver.Collector: You're mucking with a G, you fuckin' tracer.
Banky: I'll trace a chalk line around your dead fucking body, you fuck!
Holden: [to Security Guards] Will you get him out of here!
Collector: [as he's being dragged away by Security Guard] Hey wait a second! He jumped me, you fucking tracer!
Banky: YOUR MOTHER'S A TRACER!
It shows that your logic is atleast UnBiased, or atleast I hope so!! Damn. And here I was trying to show how ridiculous it is. Well, maybe next week.
http://www.rationalresponders.com/christian_pownage_101
Hey, if it's Hot, Planet-on-Planet Action, who are you to complain?
Our *three* weapons are fear, surprise, and pheromones...and an almost fanatical devotion to the Pope.... Our *four*...no... *Amongst* our weapons.... Amongst our weaponry...are such elements as fear, surprise....
Whomsoever modded the parent "Flamebait" needs to read http://www.phds.org/reading/elites.html .