Unless you are a HAM with a class specification for ISM you are NOT allowed to attach any type of amp to 802.11 equipment. If you are a HAM with said license you already know what to do and are aware that you can't use any encryption on your equipment. Attaching an amp to 802.11 equipment is a clear violation of the rules and if anyone in the area complains about interference the FCC can stomp on your bigtime.
As an interesting interview question my current manager asked my what career I would like to do if I could not work in IT. After pondering for a minute or two I said that the only other field I think I would really enjoy would be a park ranger. Since that I have revised the answer to add ultrasound technician, seeing the process on my second child with the new 3D ultrasound equipment and realizing exactly how surprised my reaction was I know that would be a cool line of work.
Not only is the upfront cost more, but so is the recurring cost. An SLI'd system with a Core 2 6800, 2GB of ram, and a single Raptor ate 524W! I have an Athlon 64 x2 4200, SLI'd 7600GT's, Raid'd HDD's and 2Gb of ram and I probably pull 150W max.
Not sure about Linux/OSS for realtime performances but there's Rosegarden as an OSS band-in-a-box. The program I have personally seen used live is Propellerhead's Reason. Even with Reason you will generally want a MIDI controller keyboard as the PC keyboard makes a fairly poor input for music. I like to use my PC as a performance instrument, but of a different kind. I use Winamp with Milkdrop to do live VJ performances in accompaniment with live DJ's. I use my own mixer coming off the main mixer so I can adjust levels to achieve a better input to the plugin to get the most accurate sync between the motion and music. I have used a number of different conference room type projectors for raves of upwards of a couple hundred people.
This is why I love HP, RAID drives can be dropped into almost any other HP machine and the RAID read. As HP puts it:
Data compatibility between models of Smart Array Controllers means customers can easily upgrade to future Smart Array, SAS products to get higher performance, capacity and availability. Unlike competitive products, successive generations of Smart Array products understand the data format of other Smart Array controllers, providing investment protection for your HP storage solution.
For a couple grand per disk there are a number of services that will turn around data in ~48 hours. Unless you are a daily that is probably good enough. The fee from most of the services for an analysis of how much data can be retrieved is generally in the couple hundred dollar range. For business critical data it's a nobrainer most of the time. It's not a substitute for backups, but when the CEO's laptop dies and he didn't follow procedures it can be a career saver.
AMD is already a member of UEFI so there would not be any need to wrestle UFI away from Intel. EFI is a fairly open standard, it has to be if there is any hope of getting rid of the legacy BIOS. Licensing for IP in the UEFI spec is licensed in a RAND fashion so anyone who wants to can implement it by simply paying standard rates.
The most tremendous failures I have personally seen in the classroom are people with lots of "life experience" but who are not lifelong academics.
I would strongly disagree with this as a generality. One of the best professors I ever had was a non-academic, she was a career professional who taught Calculus to adults at night. She was able to teach me and many others a difficult subject when most of us had failed to learn it multiple times from "academic" mathematicians. Particularly in technical subjects those who are the best researchers are often the poorest teachers.
I wonder if this is JET Red (aka the Access/MDAC DB engine) or JET Blue (aka the Exchange/AD DB engine). The two are both referred to as JET but they are very different animals. Given the problems it's probably Red, which would be an almost criminally stupid idea, MSDE has been around forever and is MUCH more suited to this kind of application. If it's Blue then it's not such a big deal since Blue runs some of the largest email and LDAP implementations in the world.
I'm an environmentalist but I can guarantee you despite the fact that a fusion plant would be better for the environment that any current power source that the environmental wackos would cause the permitting process to take closer to 10-20 years.
Uh, you change the account the service is started as, it's not hard. We did it for security and so that Oracle jobs could write to UNC resources. There were some local rights on the box that needed to be granted, but they are standard stuff for service accounts.
Wow, my 11th grade year I had Honors American History and we used three different college texts throughout the year, for our final we had to write an essay on how the political leanings of the three authors flavored the way that they reported history in their texts. We also had to write a 10 page paper on a significant historical event with a minimum of 10 bibliographical references. The best of those papers were submitted to a collegiate paper writing contest. If we were forced to simply memorize facts and dates I would have been bored to tears and would have probably failed, instead I earned a high B =)
Wow, I've seen prices go from $1,500/month to $400/month for local loop + internet as long as you aren't out in the boondocks where the RBOC can charge an arm and a leg for local loop.
Ah but many contracts do state a minimal acceptable performance within the ISP's network. I know I would bitch like hell if my telco provided T1/3 has crappy response times to any system they own, heck I yell if they are using a bad peer for a particular route. They can't always fix the problem but if I am seeing excessive packet loss along a route they will often adjust the route.
I take it you've never run Autocad,SolidWorks,Maya,3ds Max, etc? Because there are plenty of workstation apps that will use as much CPU power as you can throw at them, even for preproduction.
Tell that to our DL585's and DL585g2's with four dual core Opterons and 32GB of ram running Oracle 10g r2. I run an S&P 500 company on Windows 2003 with a smattering of Linux. We could run Oracle RAC on linux but the cost for equivalent performance in Oracle licenses would have been a LOT more than the Windows Enterprise license.
Huh? We've had the quad core Xeon's in the server space for quite a while. I have a bunch of HP BL460c's with dual E5345 for a total of 8x2.33Ghz cores.
Actually to me it looks like a high end workstation, so having as much GPU power as possible is probably a good idea. I imagine 8 cores and dual Quadro FX 5600's would make one hell of a CAD station =)
That's funny, your own link to Wiki contradicts your assertion that you don't get MVCC with MySQL. MySQL when used with InnoDB [7] or Falcon [8] storage engines.
The reason they are integrated is that in order to invite someone who is not on your system you need a method of transferring the invite. Since we already have a reliable method for transporting messages between parties on separate systems it makes sense to use SMTP as the transport mechanism rather than reinvent the wheel.
Actually no, in the case of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit shoot he only had a bag of disposables. His shots didn't make the cover but he did get several of his models into the edition.
Unless you are a HAM with a class specification for ISM you are NOT allowed to attach any type of amp to 802.11 equipment. If you are a HAM with said license you already know what to do and are aware that you can't use any encryption on your equipment. Attaching an amp to 802.11 equipment is a clear violation of the rules and if anyone in the area complains about interference the FCC can stomp on your bigtime.
As an interesting interview question my current manager asked my what career I would like to do if I could not work in IT. After pondering for a minute or two I said that the only other field I think I would really enjoy would be a park ranger. Since that I have revised the answer to add ultrasound technician, seeing the process on my second child with the new 3D ultrasound equipment and realizing exactly how surprised my reaction was I know that would be a cool line of work.
Not only is the upfront cost more, but so is the recurring cost. An SLI'd system with a Core 2 6800, 2GB of ram, and a single Raptor ate 524W! I have an Athlon 64 x2 4200, SLI'd 7600GT's, Raid'd HDD's and 2Gb of ram and I probably pull 150W max.
Not sure about Linux/OSS for realtime performances but there's Rosegarden as an OSS band-in-a-box. The program I have personally seen used live is Propellerhead's Reason. Even with Reason you will generally want a MIDI controller keyboard as the PC keyboard makes a fairly poor input for music. I like to use my PC as a performance instrument, but of a different kind. I use Winamp with Milkdrop to do live VJ performances in accompaniment with live DJ's. I use my own mixer coming off the main mixer so I can adjust levels to achieve a better input to the plugin to get the most accurate sync between the motion and music. I have used a number of different conference room type projectors for raves of upwards of a couple hundred people.
This is why I love HP, RAID drives can be dropped into almost any other HP machine and the RAID read. As HP puts it:
Data compatibility between models of Smart Array Controllers means customers can easily upgrade to future Smart Array, SAS products to get higher performance, capacity and availability. Unlike competitive products, successive generations of Smart Array products understand the data format of other Smart Array controllers, providing investment protection for your HP storage solution.
For a couple grand per disk there are a number of services that will turn around data in ~48 hours. Unless you are a daily that is probably good enough. The fee from most of the services for an analysis of how much data can be retrieved is generally in the couple hundred dollar range. For business critical data it's a nobrainer most of the time. It's not a substitute for backups, but when the CEO's laptop dies and he didn't follow procedures it can be a career saver.
AMD is already a member of UEFI so there would not be any need to wrestle UFI away from Intel. EFI is a fairly open standard, it has to be if there is any hope of getting rid of the legacy BIOS. Licensing for IP in the UEFI spec is licensed in a RAND fashion so anyone who wants to can implement it by simply paying standard rates.
The most tremendous failures I have personally seen in the classroom are people with lots of "life experience" but who are not lifelong academics.
I would strongly disagree with this as a generality. One of the best professors I ever had was a non-academic, she was a career professional who taught Calculus to adults at night. She was able to teach me and many others a difficult subject when most of us had failed to learn it multiple times from "academic" mathematicians. Particularly in technical subjects those who are the best researchers are often the poorest teachers.
I wonder if this is JET Red (aka the Access/MDAC DB engine) or JET Blue (aka the Exchange/AD DB engine). The two are both referred to as JET but they are very different animals. Given the problems it's probably Red, which would be an almost criminally stupid idea, MSDE has been around forever and is MUCH more suited to this kind of application. If it's Blue then it's not such a big deal since Blue runs some of the largest email and LDAP implementations in the world.
They also had some awesome Dye Sub printers in the mid 90's (the still do, but I know that had them at least that far back).
I'm an environmentalist but I can guarantee you despite the fact that a fusion plant would be better for the environment that any current power source that the environmental wackos would cause the permitting process to take closer to 10-20 years.
Uh, you change the account the service is started as, it's not hard. We did it for security and so that Oracle jobs could write to UNC resources. There were some local rights on the box that needed to be granted, but they are standard stuff for service accounts.
Wow, my 11th grade year I had Honors American History and we used three different college texts throughout the year, for our final we had to write an essay on how the political leanings of the three authors flavored the way that they reported history in their texts. We also had to write a 10 page paper on a significant historical event with a minimum of 10 bibliographical references. The best of those papers were submitted to a collegiate paper writing contest. If we were forced to simply memorize facts and dates I would have been bored to tears and would have probably failed, instead I earned a high B =)
Wow, I've seen prices go from $1,500/month to $400/month for local loop + internet as long as you aren't out in the boondocks where the RBOC can charge an arm and a leg for local loop.
Ah but many contracts do state a minimal acceptable performance within the ISP's network. I know I would bitch like hell if my telco provided T1/3 has crappy response times to any system they own, heck I yell if they are using a bad peer for a particular route. They can't always fix the problem but if I am seeing excessive packet loss along a route they will often adjust the route.
Uh, my Oracle doesn't run as system, it runs as its own account....
someone else has as messed up an education system as the US.
I take it you've never run Autocad,SolidWorks,Maya,3ds Max, etc? Because there are plenty of workstation apps that will use as much CPU power as you can throw at them, even for preproduction.
Tell that to our DL585's and DL585g2's with four dual core Opterons and 32GB of ram running Oracle 10g r2. I run an S&P 500 company on Windows 2003 with a smattering of Linux. We could run Oracle RAC on linux but the cost for equivalent performance in Oracle licenses would have been a LOT more than the Windows Enterprise license.
Huh? We've had the quad core Xeon's in the server space for quite a while. I have a bunch of HP BL460c's with dual E5345 for a total of 8x2.33Ghz cores.
Actually to me it looks like a high end workstation, so having as much GPU power as possible is probably a good idea. I imagine 8 cores and dual Quadro FX 5600's would make one hell of a CAD station =)
That's funny, your own link to Wiki contradicts your assertion that you don't get MVCC with MySQL.
MySQL when used with InnoDB [7] or Falcon [8] storage engines.
I uses Leetkey with Thunderbird for news reading in forums that use ROT13 frequently.
The reason they are integrated is that in order to invite someone who is not on your system you need a method of transferring the invite. Since we already have a reliable method for transporting messages between parties on separate systems it makes sense to use SMTP as the transport mechanism rather than reinvent the wheel.
Actually no, in the case of the Sports Illustrated swimsuit shoot he only had a bag of disposables. His shots didn't make the cover but he did get several of his models into the edition.