The furthest known star is 13.26 billion light-years from earth. I would bet that there are more than a few HeH+ molecules there, seeing that stars are made up of Hydrogen and Helium. Why only 3000 light years?
I stopped doing that way before Amazon became a thing. It turns out, that sales people don't actually USE the products that they sell. What's worse is that they just repeat the marketing gibberish on the product description and sales literature, but often have no clue as to what they are saying. For a solid single-piece item, that may be fine, but for anything electronic, or has complex moving parts, Sales people are idiots.
Well, it doesn't seem to even ASK you for your email address, or any other personal identifying information. It only seems to store the name of the company/service that was breached, and what KIND of information was leaked. If that database was released to the public, that would only be BETTER for consumers...
HP Laserjet 5si (and 8000 series) printers were designed for maintainability. The electronics and motors were on a backplane, and all other components connected to them with easy push-on or drop-in connectors. The most common repairs were stupidly easy to accomplish. You can remove the fuser and various pick-up rollers without a screwdriver. Along with the toner cartridge, these were the most commonly replaced parts. I have seen these printers with MILLIONS of pages on them.
Ugh! The only thing the addition of the windows key has done has been to kick me out of a game when I accidentally hit it. Almost every other function can be done with a control-keypress equivalent. They just wanted the branding on every keyboard ever. I'm surprised that they didn't implement a windows button on Mice.
In the era of DOS applications, F3 was the nearly universal key for exiting the program, and returning to the DOS prompt. This was pretty ubiquitous, except for WordPerfect, which for some reason used F7, and never had an on-screen legend to tell you how to exit. The F1 key was also the universal key for Help.
Since the implementation of GUIs beginning with Windows, the F3 function key has had no effect, or does something other than Exiting.
The Minnesota License software is called MNLARS, and is made by a company called Mathtech, Inc. It would be interesting to see if your state uses software from the same vendor.
Suppose there is a hull breach, and a loss of pressure. I wonder how all the electrolytic capacitors in the power supplies will deal with that. Will the electrolyte slowly boil away, or will the capacitors suddenly rupture.
It's not only NASA that wants to know how these things perform.
Anyone who has worked in retail knows the torturous effects of Christmas music. It's hard to be festive or jolly when you have heard Jingle Bell Rock too many times.
The furthest known star is 13.26 billion light-years from earth. I would bet that there are more than a few HeH+ molecules there, seeing that stars are made up of Hydrogen and Helium. Why only 3000 light years?
I stopped doing that way before Amazon became a thing. It turns out, that sales people don't actually USE the products that they sell. What's worse is that they just repeat the marketing gibberish on the product description and sales literature, but often have no clue as to what they are saying. For a solid single-piece item, that may be fine, but for anything electronic, or has complex moving parts, Sales people are idiots.
If we have learned ANYTHING from SciFi movies, it's that alien bacteria *LOVES* radiation.
Well, it doesn't seem to even ASK you for your email address, or any other personal identifying information. It only seems to store the name of the company/service that was breached, and what KIND of information was leaked. If that database was released to the public, that would only be BETTER for consumers...
He said Fortnight was MORE ADDICTIVE than alcohol or drugs, not MORE DEADLY.
HP Laserjet 5si (and 8000 series) printers were designed for maintainability. The electronics and motors were on a backplane, and all other components connected to them with easy push-on or drop-in connectors. The most common repairs were stupidly easy to accomplish. You can remove the fuser and various pick-up rollers without a screwdriver. Along with the toner cartridge, these were the most commonly replaced parts. I have seen these printers with MILLIONS of pages on them.
...And completely sane users who also hate systemd.
He already pleaded guilty. I think the lawyer is just doing what he can at this point.
Data lost due to corruption. Backups of corrupted data contain corrupted data.
Let's hope that the black hole at your destination is still there when you arrive. It might have moved or dissipated.
Drop a black hole anchor.
Not all at the same time.
Or, with so much hydrogen around, someone lit a match.
Yeah, it's due to a change in The Matrix.
Ugh! The only thing the addition of the windows key has done has been to kick me out of a game when I accidentally hit it. Almost every other function can be done with a control-keypress equivalent. They just wanted the branding on every keyboard ever. I'm surprised that they didn't implement a windows button on Mice.
In the era of DOS applications, F3 was the nearly universal key for exiting the program, and returning to the DOS prompt. This was pretty ubiquitous, except for WordPerfect, which for some reason used F7, and never had an on-screen legend to tell you how to exit. The F1 key was also the universal key for Help.
Since the implementation of GUIs beginning with Windows, the F3 function key has had no effect, or does something other than Exiting.
Insecure IoT devices are a threat to EVERYONE, including the federal government, regardless of if they are used by the government or not.
The Minnesota License software is called MNLARS, and is made by a company called Mathtech, Inc. It would be interesting to see if your state uses software from the same vendor.
Suppose there is a hull breach, and a loss of pressure. I wonder how all the electrolytic capacitors in the power supplies will deal with that. Will the electrolyte slowly boil away, or will the capacitors suddenly rupture.
It's not only NASA that wants to know how these things perform.
Ahhh, CompUSA. The place where they don't put prices on the merchandise, only SKU numbers. It's not a surprise that they went out of business.
Tinnitus that was caused by TOO MUCH NOISE.
Doesn't Facebook require real names? That, paired with the Cognizant corporate employee directory should be enough to ID the moderator.
Anyone who has worked in retail knows the torturous effects of Christmas music. It's hard to be festive or jolly when you have heard Jingle Bell Rock too many times.
New Hot Wheels brand hovercars that float above a magnetic racetrack. If Mattel licenses the technology, can Hoverboards be far behind?
Yeah, they're implants, but are they CYBERNETIC, or just saline? Do they even have Bluetooth?