Actually the first general purpose computer was designed for calculating ballistic tables and was actually first used to speed calculations for the Manhattan project.
The natural economic forces in health care work against the common interest with privatization, but most of the role of social security could be privatized while moving social security back to being a social safety net and not a national retirement account.
Uh, the BMW x1 xdrive20d is a freaking full time 4wd SUV that gets 41mpg US. I can't wait till they go on sale next year in the US because there is literally nothing else in the segment within 10mpg of it. Sure they also make gas guzzlers, but they have some of the best technology of any car company to achieve good fuel economy. Also 41mpg is better than any US bus system outside of NYC and possibly Chicago or DC (though I've ridden on plenty of mostly empty smoke belchers in both)
Otherwise, areas begin to build real budgets based on projections and become dependent upon that income.
Yeah, the village of Linndale (an inner ring Cleveland suburb) is a classic example. At one point fully 60% of their village budget came from a speedtrap they ran on I71, the village officers had to exit their jurisdiction to even get onto the highway!
Actually an 8 way Opteron with the newest processors will have a STREAM rate of ~320GB/s and have a heck of a lot more than 8GB of ram available =) Besides the T90 was mid 90's, not early =)
Considering how many different varieties of commercial yeast are used in brewing (not to mention wild strains found in some Belgians and some other styles) I don't think you can disqualify it as a beer based on the strain of yeast. Besides, they didn't just take an off the shelf champagne yeast, they started with a champagne yeast and bred their own variety that was even more alcohol tolerant =)
Home distilling isn't legal in most of the US (stupid blue laws and revenuers), but I don't think any state board (except maybe PA and UT) have time to enforce such idiocy against a homebrewer and the ATF has responded to several inquiry's stating that they don't have time now that they are part of DHS and have actual bad guys to worry about.
Nope, Utopias achieves it's high content via fermentation alone, it combines extremely high initial gravity with a particularly strong strain of yeast.
Does the protected path option double the recurring cost or does it only add to the setup cost? I'm asking because the pricing sheet looks good and I'd consider moving our Salt Lake City office to it when their current contract expires if you can get 99.99% SLA for the cost of the 10Mbps plan.
$100/hour is WAY high, our average across our organization is $45/hour and that's averaging in executives. $45/hour is $60k/year plus overhead with very good benefits and assuming everyone takes full advantage.
For reading you probably don't even need something that old, a DLTIV tape from 1994 can be read on a SDLT320 drive that's still sold new today =) Heck a DLTIII tape from 1989 can be read on a DLT7000 drive that you can also still buy new (for ~$150).
Yeah but a 5MB/s SCSI drive can be used with a U320 controller and a an original IDE drive can be used with a SATA 6G controller with a readily available adapter. That doesn't make HDD's superior to tape, but it does mean you should be able to read them with current tech slightly longer than tape. But that's beside the point, I've recovered 16 year old DLT tapes which is significantly older than the vast majority of businesses need and if you need longer IBM supports their tape formats basically forever for enough money =)
We have previous versions enabled for the 80% restore cases as well as keeping two days database backups on the servers. We also replicate everything to our DR site, but for legal holds and having a backup that even a domain admin can't nuke I still believe in tape.
Minimum streaming rate is drive dependent, but HP's LTO4 drives have a minimum streaming rate of only 40MB/s which should be easy to keep up with multiplexed jobs. It's funny that the "problem" with tape has shifted from them being too slow to them being too fast =)
Actually the first general purpose computer was designed for calculating ballistic tables and was actually first used to speed calculations for the Manhattan project.
The natural economic forces in health care work against the common interest with privatization, but most of the role of social security could be privatized while moving social security back to being a social safety net and not a national retirement account.
It has a heck of a launch and assembly facility though =)
Do you have the couple hundred thousand it would cost?
Uh, the BMW x1 xdrive20d is a freaking full time 4wd SUV that gets 41mpg US. I can't wait till they go on sale next year in the US because there is literally nothing else in the segment within 10mpg of it. Sure they also make gas guzzlers, but they have some of the best technology of any car company to achieve good fuel economy. Also 41mpg is better than any US bus system outside of NYC and possibly Chicago or DC (though I've ridden on plenty of mostly empty smoke belchers in both)
It's not bait and switch, it only applies to new lines or to month-to-month plans like the iPad.
Otherwise, areas begin to build real budgets based on projections and become dependent upon that income.
Yeah, the village of Linndale (an inner ring Cleveland suburb) is a classic example. At one point fully 60% of their village budget came from a speedtrap they ran on I71, the village officers had to exit their jurisdiction to even get onto the highway!
Following the suspect with a certified speedometer.
Actually an 8 way Opteron with the newest processors will have a STREAM rate of ~320GB/s and have a heck of a lot more than 8GB of ram available =) Besides the T90 was mid 90's, not early =)
The Firefox crashes are fixed in the current version, plugins get their own executable which is simply relaunched when the plugin crashes =)
Considering how many different varieties of commercial yeast are used in brewing (not to mention wild strains found in some Belgians and some other styles) I don't think you can disqualify it as a beer based on the strain of yeast. Besides, they didn't just take an off the shelf champagne yeast, they started with a champagne yeast and bred their own variety that was even more alcohol tolerant =)
How can it be any more dangerous than drinking the undistilled beer? The ratio of contaminants to alcohol will remain the same.
Home distilling isn't legal in most of the US (stupid blue laws and revenuers), but I don't think any state board (except maybe PA and UT) have time to enforce such idiocy against a homebrewer and the ATF has responded to several inquiry's stating that they don't have time now that they are part of DHS and have actual bad guys to worry about.
Nope, Utopias achieves it's high content via fermentation alone, it combines extremely high initial gravity with a particularly strong strain of yeast.
Does the protected path option double the recurring cost or does it only add to the setup cost? I'm asking because the pricing sheet looks good and I'd consider moving our Salt Lake City office to it when their current contract expires if you can get 99.99% SLA for the cost of the 10Mbps plan.
$100/hour is WAY high, our average across our organization is $45/hour and that's averaging in executives. $45/hour is $60k/year plus overhead with very good benefits and assuming everyone takes full advantage.
For reading you probably don't even need something that old, a DLTIV tape from 1994 can be read on a SDLT320 drive that's still sold new today =) Heck a DLTIII tape from 1989 can be read on a DLT7000 drive that you can also still buy new (for ~$150).
LTO4 tapes are $30 in quantity, changes the equation quite a bit, 3.75c/GB before compression =)
p.s. Your math was wrong even @ $50, it's 6.25c/GB without compression and the HDD is 7c/GB.
Yeah but a 5MB/s SCSI drive can be used with a U320 controller and a an original IDE drive can be used with a SATA 6G controller with a readily available adapter. That doesn't make HDD's superior to tape, but it does mean you should be able to read them with current tech slightly longer than tape. But that's beside the point, I've recovered 16 year old DLT tapes which is significantly older than the vast majority of businesses need and if you need longer IBM supports their tape formats basically forever for enough money =)
Hehe, you have no clue what you are talking about, ICA is completely usable over dialup, there is no half meg image.
I'd bet that optical has an uncorrected bit error rate a couple orders of magnitude worse than HDD, but yeah you have the right idea =)
We have previous versions enabled for the 80% restore cases as well as keeping two days database backups on the servers. We also replicate everything to our DR site, but for legal holds and having a backup that even a domain admin can't nuke I still believe in tape.
I was specifically thinking of OpenAFS when reading AFS as I don't work with dinosaur herders =)
Minimum streaming rate is drive dependent, but HP's LTO4 drives have a minimum streaming rate of only 40MB/s which should be easy to keep up with multiplexed jobs. It's funny that the "problem" with tape has shifted from them being too slow to them being too fast =)
So you don't believe in an oh s**t offline backup? If not then I'd hate to be there when you find out why people with experience insist on it.