You completely miss the fact that there is a fairly large developer following of MS technologies, and I've seen several MS-orientated people say "ordered and signed up" in the hours following the launch, pretty much all want to try out Windows 10 on it.
You need to see how active people are in the vNext, NancyFX or Omnisharp communities to understand just how many non-Microsoft people are actually involved in Microsoft orientated open source space, many of which would be interested in this sort of thing.
Buy a few of these to throw vNext on several platforms to see how it performs, or run a distributed.Net application on for learning purposes etc etc. Loads of things being talked about.
If open was their goal, why did they go with components which require closed source drivers and firmware?
From what I can see, Raspberry Pi's goal was to be this generations BBC Micro, nothing else. Something that is cheap to hack on - Linux was free from a license cost perspective, so that's what got used. The non-open components were cheap from a cost perspective, so thats what got used.
Most kids who have younger siblings or friends who have younger siblings have seen a pregnant woman, so what is the big deal? Idiots teaching others how to be idiots by example.
Quite probably because that article also contained stuff on sex, which some parents don't want their children exposed to until later on in life (10+ of age) - once little Johnny gets lose with that book in the classroom, some kids might be going home with some awkward questions for their parents that evening, and the school doesn't want that backlash.
I remember once going on a school ski trip to Austria when I was 8 or 9, and my parents lent the group some of my collection of videos for us kids to watch in the evening (teacher approved of course). One of the films was Logans Run, which has a rather choice breast scene and the line "Lets go have sex" in it. Guess who got in trouble after that trip;) And this was in the 1980s at a non-religious British school....
So long as you abide by the Data Protection Act, the British Government have no issues with you operating a CCTV camera. Let me repeat that - so long as you abide by the Data Protection Act...
So, if you follow the rules you are fine. Just as Google would have been if they had followed the rules.
You haven't seen much until you drive through Jo' Burg and see an armoured personnel carrier and a dozen heavily armed policemen in the middle of a busy roundabout...
The South African police still have them - pretty scary considering most of the world at one point considered the ANC a violent terrorist organisation.
Hey, we don't want a stray nuclear explosion to send the moon off on a fantastical but low budget trip across the universe, requiring some really bad acting and 1970s styles to come back into fashion!
I'm a Sky customer, I get my home phone package (unlimited calls, any time), internet (50Mbps fibre, no cap, no quota, no limit), and TV package (HD, movies, tonnes of entertainment channels, F1 etc) for roughly £75 a month - and my opinion is that its worth paying that for the service I get.
Skys video on demand service is brilliant, and I get access to it on my PC and mobile devices as well.
I've experienced Virgin Media (had it for a couple of years after I moved to this city) and Sky is simply better imho. When I wanted to move home, Virgin wanted a load of money to move the contract, and I had to sign up for a new contract at the new location. Sky however just said "yup, no issues, your phone and internet will be activated on this date, your TV will just work, no cost to move, and no new contract", which is great because Im only in the new place for 6 months until my property is built.
I'm currently on a business contract with EE for my mobile service, but I will be watching Skys offering with interest.
Look it up, the US lost that WTO case a few years ago when those loans were declared legal with a minor correction needed. It was the US that fell foul when the WTO declared the subsidies Boeing received from Washington State and other places to be illegal.
The reason they landed at Manchester was not because they burned more fuel, but it was because they thought that the fuel on the outer wing tank on the wing that had the shut down engine on was inaccessible - this turned out to be false, they could have made it all the way to LHR without issue.
That entirely depends on the use you have for the aircraft - high oil price or not, no aircraft has the CASM of the A380 (not even the proposed 777X), which puts it in a league of its own. Consequently, the 747-8 falls foul to the 777 so the sole VLA competitor to the A380 would be killed by its own sibling...
Oil can go through the roof, but if you can fill an A380 then thats the aircraft you need for the job. You can't shoehorn 600 into a 777 no matter how hard you try.
Fully aware of the KC-X contest, NG was the prime contractor but it was actually Airbus that did all the work.
The KC-X contest was only ran because Boeing got caught firstly trying to lease replacement tankers to the USAF at a rate which was several times more than they cost to buy, and then Boeing got caught in the first round buying the Airbus bid details from the US DOD procurement officer in charge of the bids.
Even with a US prime contractor and a US assembly line, there was massive uproar over the fact that Airbus had won the second round of bidding, before it got out back out to tender and Boeing magically found a way to make the 767 offering several billion dollars less than their previous bid...
There is no way the US political arena would accept a non-American plane as AF1. Which raises an interesting problem when the next replacement comes round...
The 747-8 has new engines, a new wing definition and loft, new winglets, new avionics and significant aerodynamic improvements across the board. The only thing left to do is switch construction to CFRP or another modern material, and its cheaper to do an all new aircraft for that as you have to redesign the framework completely for the new material loading. The -8 will be the last 747.
Plus, while iconic, the 747 carries a lot of unnecessary weight around due to its short upper deck (there is a lot of wasted dead space behind that hump in commercial aircraft, so much so that they considered putting a dozen sleeping berths up there), so compared to single deck aircraft or the A380 its not as well optimised weight wise for its structure.
There will be hundreds of 747s flying for the next three to four decades, so parts are not an issue - Boeing makes the majority of its money on aftermarket care and parts, they won't close those lines down fast.
Also, Airbus refused to submit a proposal for this when approached several years ago (while there was no bidding process, basic proposals were requested from both Airbus and Boeing) because they knew it was a no contest decision.
Its about the same here - the technique they are talking about here is for the (typically) bank owned ATMs which are fixed in place, in a wall.
The technique for the independent cash machines is simply to break into the store, tie a chain around them, attach the chain to a 4x4 and drive off - it yanks the cash machine off the fixture and usually breaks it open as well.
Take a backup if you are so precious about your current OS, it even tells you how in the Insider documentation - enough has changed that they have to migrate the user account stuff, so that gives an indication of how different things are now.
And yes, you can select your updates, just like before.
I've thought this on a couple of occasions - the US political movement seems to have a not inconsiderable number of people who are more interested in using their political stature to support other countries rather than their own. So you have a large number of voters and politicians who consider Cuba to be their primary voting area, and another larger number of voters and politicians who consider Israel to be their primary voting area.
Stop leaning hard on Cuba, suddenly theres huge outcry from pressure groups and politicians who threaten all sorts of things (see the recent threats by several Congressmen and Senators who shouted loudly that the Cuban embargo laws would never be lifted).
Stop supporting Israel or cut the amount of funding to Israel, suddenly theres huge outcry from pressure groups and politicians who denounce any and all who don't consider Israel of the utmost importance.
To outsiders looking in, it does look like there are many groups and people who value other countries more than they value their "own" country.
You completely miss the fact that there is a fairly large developer following of MS technologies, and I've seen several MS-orientated people say "ordered and signed up" in the hours following the launch, pretty much all want to try out Windows 10 on it.
You need to see how active people are in the vNext, NancyFX or Omnisharp communities to understand just how many non-Microsoft people are actually involved in Microsoft orientated open source space, many of which would be interested in this sort of thing.
Buy a few of these to throw vNext on several platforms to see how it performs, or run a distributed .Net application on for learning purposes etc etc. Loads of things being talked about.
If open was their goal, why did they go with components which require closed source drivers and firmware?
From what I can see, Raspberry Pi's goal was to be this generations BBC Micro, nothing else. Something that is cheap to hack on - Linux was free from a license cost perspective, so that's what got used. The non-open components were cheap from a cost perspective, so thats what got used.
Most kids who have younger siblings or friends who have younger siblings have seen a pregnant woman, so what is the big deal? Idiots teaching others how to be idiots by example.
Quite probably because that article also contained stuff on sex, which some parents don't want their children exposed to until later on in life (10+ of age) - once little Johnny gets lose with that book in the classroom, some kids might be going home with some awkward questions for their parents that evening, and the school doesn't want that backlash.
I remember once going on a school ski trip to Austria when I was 8 or 9, and my parents lent the group some of my collection of videos for us kids to watch in the evening (teacher approved of course). One of the films was Logans Run, which has a rather choice breast scene and the line "Lets go have sex" in it. Guess who got in trouble after that trip ;) And this was in the 1980s at a non-religious British school....
You can contract, be diagnosed and die from cancer in less than 3 months in a normal situation - it entirely depends on how aggressive the cancer is.
Oh for crying out loud, can't that myth fucking die?
Even the police suggest its as low as 1.85 million...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-1...
So long as you abide by the Data Protection Act, the British Government have no issues with you operating a CCTV camera. Let me repeat that - so long as you abide by the Data Protection Act...
So, if you follow the rules you are fine. Just as Google would have been if they had followed the rules.
You haven't seen much until you drive through Jo' Burg and see an armoured personnel carrier and a dozen heavily armed policemen in the middle of a busy roundabout...
The South African police still have them - pretty scary considering most of the world at one point considered the ANC a violent terrorist organisation.
I have altered the deal, pray I do not alter it further?
Hey, we don't want a stray nuclear explosion to send the moon off on a fantastical but low budget trip across the universe, requiring some really bad acting and 1970s styles to come back into fashion!
That would be horrific :(
Uh, no, that's not what he said at all.
If the "lock in" is worth it, why not?
I'm a Sky customer, I get my home phone package (unlimited calls, any time), internet (50Mbps fibre, no cap, no quota, no limit), and TV package (HD, movies, tonnes of entertainment channels, F1 etc) for roughly £75 a month - and my opinion is that its worth paying that for the service I get.
Skys video on demand service is brilliant, and I get access to it on my PC and mobile devices as well.
I've experienced Virgin Media (had it for a couple of years after I moved to this city) and Sky is simply better imho. When I wanted to move home, Virgin wanted a load of money to move the contract, and I had to sign up for a new contract at the new location. Sky however just said "yup, no issues, your phone and internet will be activated on this date, your TV will just work, no cost to move, and no new contract", which is great because Im only in the new place for 6 months until my property is built.
I'm currently on a business contract with EE for my mobile service, but I will be watching Skys offering with interest.
Look it up, the US lost that WTO case a few years ago when those loans were declared legal with a minor correction needed. It was the US that fell foul when the WTO declared the subsidies Boeing received from Washington State and other places to be illegal.
You are aware that there are still some 707 and 727s in service, right? :)
The reason they landed at Manchester was not because they burned more fuel, but it was because they thought that the fuel on the outer wing tank on the wing that had the shut down engine on was inaccessible - this turned out to be false, they could have made it all the way to LHR without issue.
That entirely depends on the use you have for the aircraft - high oil price or not, no aircraft has the CASM of the A380 (not even the proposed 777X), which puts it in a league of its own. Consequently, the 747-8 falls foul to the 777 so the sole VLA competitor to the A380 would be killed by its own sibling...
Oil can go through the roof, but if you can fill an A380 then thats the aircraft you need for the job. You can't shoehorn 600 into a 777 no matter how hard you try.
Fully aware of the KC-X contest, NG was the prime contractor but it was actually Airbus that did all the work.
The KC-X contest was only ran because Boeing got caught firstly trying to lease replacement tankers to the USAF at a rate which was several times more than they cost to buy, and then Boeing got caught in the first round buying the Airbus bid details from the US DOD procurement officer in charge of the bids.
Even with a US prime contractor and a US assembly line, there was massive uproar over the fact that Airbus had won the second round of bidding, before it got out back out to tender and Boeing magically found a way to make the 767 offering several billion dollars less than their previous bid...
There is no way the US political arena would accept a non-American plane as AF1. Which raises an interesting problem when the next replacement comes round...
The 747-8 has new engines, a new wing definition and loft, new winglets, new avionics and significant aerodynamic improvements across the board. The only thing left to do is switch construction to CFRP or another modern material, and its cheaper to do an all new aircraft for that as you have to redesign the framework completely for the new material loading. The -8 will be the last 747.
Plus, while iconic, the 747 carries a lot of unnecessary weight around due to its short upper deck (there is a lot of wasted dead space behind that hump in commercial aircraft, so much so that they considered putting a dozen sleeping berths up there), so compared to single deck aircraft or the A380 its not as well optimised weight wise for its structure.
There will be hundreds of 747s flying for the next three to four decades, so parts are not an issue - Boeing makes the majority of its money on aftermarket care and parts, they won't close those lines down fast.
Also, Airbus refused to submit a proposal for this when approached several years ago (while there was no bidding process, basic proposals were requested from both Airbus and Boeing) because they knew it was a no contest decision.
Its about the same here - the technique they are talking about here is for the (typically) bank owned ATMs which are fixed in place, in a wall.
The technique for the independent cash machines is simply to break into the store, tie a chain around them, attach the chain to a 4x4 and drive off - it yanks the cash machine off the fixture and usually breaks it open as well.
Take a backup if you are so precious about your current OS, it even tells you how in the Insider documentation - enough has changed that they have to migrate the user account stuff, so that gives an indication of how different things are now.
And yes, you can select your updates, just like before.
I've thought this on a couple of occasions - the US political movement seems to have a not inconsiderable number of people who are more interested in using their political stature to support other countries rather than their own. So you have a large number of voters and politicians who consider Cuba to be their primary voting area, and another larger number of voters and politicians who consider Israel to be their primary voting area.
Stop leaning hard on Cuba, suddenly theres huge outcry from pressure groups and politicians who threaten all sorts of things (see the recent threats by several Congressmen and Senators who shouted loudly that the Cuban embargo laws would never be lifted).
Stop supporting Israel or cut the amount of funding to Israel, suddenly theres huge outcry from pressure groups and politicians who denounce any and all who don't consider Israel of the utmost importance.
To outsiders looking in, it does look like there are many groups and people who value other countries more than they value their "own" country.
What browser can't an employer control to do a MitM attack? You can turn off cert pinning in both Chrome and Firefox, as well as add your own cert...
Burt Rutan retired from Scaled Composites in 2011 and has had very little to do with them since.
Or why they are redefining a telecommunications word to include a restriction which is otherwise meaningless for 99% of broadband uses out there?
Oh look, the pro-Snowden moderation team is out in force....