Less than 15% of households receive OTA TV and of those less than 4% are due to not having a pay tv option, the rest are just cheap. Most advertisers don't care that much about that demographic so they should be using superior metrics for the audience they DO care about.
Perhaps Google will revisit what they deliver for free in the future, as it stands these residents are getting $30-50/month worth of service for free so it's pretty hard to complain.
That's fine, though I would posit that every ISP has access to the same information, and with the advent of switched digital video the cable companies have that and detailed access to what television stations people are watching (why are we relying on a handful of Nielson households for viewership data?)
Live content requires more bandwidth, the Olympics coverage from NBC was running about 7Mbps and it was barely adequate, double the bandwidth likely would have resulted in a significantly better picture. Add to that the fact that an average household can have 4 streams going and you could easily get to 60Mbps of just video streams, and that's for today's technology. Google is mostly looking at what next generation uses may spring up when bandwidth becomes ubiquitous, think of it as a private version of Internet 2.
If the residents pay the $300 install fee they get 10Mbps speed for 10 years without paying any further fee. For many of the poorer neighborhoods this was the only way to get enough households to participate to justify the buildout.
I'm only familiar with the Exchange 2010 EMC, but with it when you walk through a wizard the final step is to show you a summary of what's being performed and it allows you to view the Powershell. My understanding is that all the tools are moving in that direction.
If you're going to put apps on it a class 4 is actually preferable, class 10 devices are optimized for large streaming reads but suck at random small reads and especially writes. This was information collected by the Windows Phone enthusiast community at XDA interestingly enough. They collected the information because the Windows Phone 7 devices basically do a RAID0 across internal and external storage so it becomes very apparent if the storage is not performing well.
Get a new phone then, any phone I've had in the last 7 years can play MP3 for a day or more at a time if the screen is off and that includes my last two Android devices which have both been "poor" performers for battery life. Heck I can stream Pandora all day on my current phone which keeps the WiFi radio live and the processor out of deep sleep.
32GB of flash is super cheap, I got a Sandisk 32GB microSD (more packaging than an OEM chip) delivered for $18. The fact that so many OEM's want to tier phones based on internal flash just proves why we need standard removable storage, they're ripping off every customer who buys the higher end model for $50-100 more.
Uh, it was called into question over a decade ago. No scientific paper or journal article ever referred to it as "junk" DNA, it was called non-encoding regions and it was understood fairly early on that at least some of the area held a regulatory function. What wasn't realized until the human genome project concluded was just how little of the genome was encoding and how massively important the regulatory regions were (the human body creates a heck of a lot more than 10,000 different proteins so the regulatory regions must be more than simple on/off switches but must also have the ability to affect structural changes in the protein encoding sequence),
Yes, but if it's anything like VoIP over bulk internet in the states it will suck horribly for call quality. Having QoS\CoS is very nice and if you're going to do it why limit it to only 5% of available bandwidth per subscriber? There's a reason MPLS networks are still so popular with businesses despite the significantly higher cost per Mbps and aggravation of dealing with the telecoms.
Virgin Mobile (Sprint MVNO), they have tons of phones available including a number of fairly current Android sets and the iphone 4s, I'm in the greater Cleveland area. Virgin Mobile does not roam so if you don't have Sprint coverage it won't work for you. The intermountain west is kind of a no-mans land for any carrier, there simply isn't enough population density to justify installing towers and fiber backhauls. It's one of those places where 5W DAMPS was a useful technology =)
Because you might not know the Powershell commands to accomplish what you want to do. With the new Powershell based GUI tools you can build the command in the GUI and then inspect the generated Powershell commands and then re-purpose them.
Uh, there are at least a dozen MVNO's in the US, some of them are now owned by the big carriers as wholly owned subsidiaries but they exist and offer competitive packages (my wife's plan is through Virgin Mobile, an MVNO which Sprint bought a few years ago)
Not sure about Straight Talk (they seem to have terrible customer service from what I read online), but Virgin Mobile says up front that you get 2.5GB of EVDO speed and then are throttled to 1xRTT speed. This is vastly preferred by most MVNO customers to being raped for overages.
Really? The US has three LTE providers, how many does the UK have, how many does Germany have? Can you roam between them (especially on LTE) without being raped in the pocket book? My wife has nationwide coverage with 300 voice minutes, 2.5GB of 3G data, unlimited texts all for only $25/month. That's competitive with any offer available anywhere in the world and with a much larger coverage area.
The cray2 didn't use that much more power than todays high density systems, 195kw in about the same floorspace as four racks, which is inline with high density designs of today. I'd imagine that's why we're looking at similar solutions.
Ram dies all the time, it's my second highest AFR part after hdd's and ahead of both fans and psu's which are the only other components with a statistically significant failure rate.
do it once through the gui, pick up the powershell commands and then run them on as many servers as you need. It's really the best of both worlds and in many ways the object model of powershell is superior to the legacy shell environments.
My Android phone runs Debian.
chroot and loopback file systems are fun =)
Less than 15% of households receive OTA TV and of those less than 4% are due to not having a pay tv option, the rest are just cheap. Most advertisers don't care that much about that demographic so they should be using superior metrics for the audience they DO care about.
Perhaps Google will revisit what they deliver for free in the future, as it stands these residents are getting $30-50/month worth of service for free so it's pretty hard to complain.
That's fine, though I would posit that every ISP has access to the same information, and with the advent of switched digital video the cable companies have that and detailed access to what television stations people are watching (why are we relying on a handful of Nielson households for viewership data?)
Live content requires more bandwidth, the Olympics coverage from NBC was running about 7Mbps and it was barely adequate, double the bandwidth likely would have resulted in a significantly better picture. Add to that the fact that an average household can have 4 streams going and you could easily get to 60Mbps of just video streams, and that's for today's technology. Google is mostly looking at what next generation uses may spring up when bandwidth becomes ubiquitous, think of it as a private version of Internet 2.
If the residents pay the $300 install fee they get 10Mbps speed for 10 years without paying any further fee. For many of the poorer neighborhoods this was the only way to get enough households to participate to justify the buildout.
I don't think the version 40 QR code is going to be feasible in granite. The version 4 seems the most likely to survive and it's only 50 characters.
I'd agree only if you're using a language or pre-processor which does design by contract.
You're forgetting the SGX554, clock for clock it's twice as powerful as the GeForce ULP.
I'm only familiar with the Exchange 2010 EMC, but with it when you walk through a wizard the final step is to show you a summary of what's being performed and it allows you to view the Powershell. My understanding is that all the tools are moving in that direction.
If you're going to put apps on it a class 4 is actually preferable, class 10 devices are optimized for large streaming reads but suck at random small reads and especially writes. This was information collected by the Windows Phone enthusiast community at XDA interestingly enough. They collected the information because the Windows Phone 7 devices basically do a RAID0 across internal and external storage so it becomes very apparent if the storage is not performing well.
Get a new phone then, any phone I've had in the last 7 years can play MP3 for a day or more at a time if the screen is off and that includes my last two Android devices which have both been "poor" performers for battery life. Heck I can stream Pandora all day on my current phone which keeps the WiFi radio live and the processor out of deep sleep.
Uh, who carries an mp3 player when your phone can do that just fine (and stream Pandora on the go!).
32GB of flash is super cheap, I got a Sandisk 32GB microSD (more packaging than an OEM chip) delivered for $18. The fact that so many OEM's want to tier phones based on internal flash just proves why we need standard removable storage, they're ripping off every customer who buys the higher end model for $50-100 more.
Uh, it was called into question over a decade ago. No scientific paper or journal article ever referred to it as "junk" DNA, it was called non-encoding regions and it was understood fairly early on that at least some of the area held a regulatory function. What wasn't realized until the human genome project concluded was just how little of the genome was encoding and how massively important the regulatory regions were (the human body creates a heck of a lot more than 10,000 different proteins so the regulatory regions must be more than simple on/off switches but must also have the ability to affect structural changes in the protein encoding sequence),
Yes, but if it's anything like VoIP over bulk internet in the states it will suck horribly for call quality. Having QoS\CoS is very nice and if you're going to do it why limit it to only 5% of available bandwidth per subscriber? There's a reason MPLS networks are still so popular with businesses despite the significantly higher cost per Mbps and aggravation of dealing with the telecoms.
Virgin Mobile (Sprint MVNO), they have tons of phones available including a number of fairly current Android sets and the iphone 4s, I'm in the greater Cleveland area. Virgin Mobile does not roam so if you don't have Sprint coverage it won't work for you. The intermountain west is kind of a no-mans land for any carrier, there simply isn't enough population density to justify installing towers and fiber backhauls. It's one of those places where 5W DAMPS was a useful technology =)
Because you might not know the Powershell commands to accomplish what you want to do. With the new Powershell based GUI tools you can build the command in the GUI and then inspect the generated Powershell commands and then re-purpose them.
Uh, there are at least a dozen MVNO's in the US, some of them are now owned by the big carriers as wholly owned subsidiaries but they exist and offer competitive packages (my wife's plan is through Virgin Mobile, an MVNO which Sprint bought a few years ago)
Not sure about Straight Talk (they seem to have terrible customer service from what I read online), but Virgin Mobile says up front that you get 2.5GB of EVDO speed and then are throttled to 1xRTT speed. This is vastly preferred by most MVNO customers to being raped for overages.
Really? The US has three LTE providers, how many does the UK have, how many does Germany have? Can you roam between them (especially on LTE) without being raped in the pocket book? My wife has nationwide coverage with 300 voice minutes, 2.5GB of 3G data, unlimited texts all for only $25/month. That's competitive with any offer available anywhere in the world and with a much larger coverage area.
The cray2 didn't use that much more power than todays high density systems, 195kw in about the same floorspace as four racks, which is inline with high density designs of today. I'd imagine that's why we're looking at similar solutions.
Ram dies all the time, it's my second highest AFR part after hdd's and ahead of both fans and psu's which are the only other components with a statistically significant failure rate.
It's deprecated, the reasoning afaik is that syswow64 is optional in core so developers should not be designing new apps that rely on it.
do it once through the gui, pick up the powershell commands and then run them on as many servers as you need. It's really the best of both worlds and in many ways the object model of powershell is superior to the legacy shell environments.