Good ol' child pornographers and terrorists, the ubiquitous go-to for governments when they want to convince their citizens intrusion of their privacy is reasonable.
Fight fire with fire. Tell them we need encryption to keep child pornographers from hacking our internet-facing baby monitors.
How many root certificates does Microsoft hold and how long did it take to recover the 147 that were lost? Tech news posted to Slashdot tends to be a little skeletal and runs on the principle of "better late than never."
343 total, and they're required to be audited annually. It doesn't take a mathematician to see how old thier tarball was!
You're both wrong. EIRP on an omni antenna such as TV or FM is usually about 10:1. I should know, I maintain two TV transmitters and five FM transmitters. Example. One of my rigs produces 1645 watts of RF energy into an antenna with ~9db of gain, which gets me to my EIRP of 15kW.
1) Lead arch developer got his computer hacked 3 times. see: https://web.archive.org/web/20...
2) Unstable. Go check out arch's forum instead of listening to the fanboy to see the enormous amounts of issues.
3) Unprofessional. Arch isn't used in any professional environment for a good reason. Made by amateurs.
4) Community. Pretentious, trendy, ricer, hippie morons.
5) Forum. Full of noob questions (can't help it as majority is ex-ubuntu users)
Top 5 reasons why Arch Linux sucks
1) That was 2005. Cut the guy some slack, Arch wasn't even really a "thing" yet. Show us a recent breach?
2) Unstable? Citation please? Other than "go read the forum"...
3) Unprofessional? See above. It seems you missed the whole point of a rolling-release distro geared for developers. Nobody in their right mind would replace RHEL with Arch and it was never meant to! That is not to say professionals do not use arch. You tried to hard to make this a black-and-white debate.
4) Now you've totally lost it. Calling Arch users "trendy" is just stupid. We are like 1% of the Linux user base and most of us are into esoteric stuff.
5) Show me a distro who's forum not full of noob questions. That's pretty much what they exist for.
2) The valves landed harshly leading to valve seat wear. The SAE paper suggested using a method for softer valve landings.
I am just a computer nerd, but perhaps they need to rethink the valve all together to achieve a cam-less engine. Maybe an electronic trap door that slides open and closed really fast would work better. It wouldn't need a rod to push it along the Z-axis and there's no longer a valve seat to even worry about!
These are great for ISPs, Google, and Amazon where power saving is important. Think nodes in clusters. Server 2012R2 has an arm port and has hyper-v too.
Power costs are astronomical in these environment's
It will also be great for more-or-less embedded applications like firewalls, storage arrays, de-duplicators, media server/transcoders, etc where you need a healthy CPU and great ethernet bandwidth. I think they on the right path here in terms of an efficient platform for SoC-based appliance manufacturers, where watt-hungry dual and quad-core Intel chips have been the de facto choice. Atom provided an option for those craving a more efficient chip, but IMHO, while it works in clusters, it never performed well enough to stand alone. It may seem like a bold maneuver to some, it is not like they are proposing a new (or even "dead") architecture--ARM is well established and it should be little sweat for developers to adopt. I would love to see this work out for AMD, it is a decent strategy seeing as how they haven't been able to catch up to Intel in the desktop market for quite some time.
Because of the ease of counterfeiting alloys, the coins would need to be made of pure precious metal. Then we're back to an age old problem, namely, the hands which said precious metals lie in.
A DRAM cell goes through trillions of cycles in its live time.
Typical DDR4 (2133) runs at a little over 1 GHz, or a billion cycles per second of operation.
We're in the quadrillions scale, not trillions.
Maybe he meant "cycles during which its own state is changed". They get less wear coasting for a few quadrillion laps than they do altering the value a few trillion times.
""is based on a Unix-like software called FreeBSD"....HA!."
One software, two softwares, right? One hardware, two hardwares. One information, two informations. One firmware, two firmwares. Right? And when you correct someone ("it is one PIECE of software, or one PIECE of firmware"), the response is "English is a changing language" NO. Pardon me whilst I go eat some toasts.
The OP was not making a grammatical objection.. He was clearly objecting to the fact that they called FreeBSD "Unix-like" when it *IS* Unix.
animated content is much harder for the 8-bit encoding. It's the hard edges with high contrast cell shading.
Nonsense. Animation is optimized for compression.. It's already dithered to a limited color set! Whole swathes of pixels get the same value. Sure, you might be able to SEE the compression.. But it is a breeze for the hardware, and bitrates can be dramatically reduced compared to the baseband 4-2-2 video.
How long before the insurance scammers figure out how to "bait" these new Volvi into crashing? This seems like the perfect neck-injury con-job just waiting to happen.
Chrome (not Chromium)
Or for the Chrome adverse, Chromium + Chromium-Widevine. Chrome simply has Widevine baked in.
4.2 Types of Usage Data
Wire client applications collect several types of usage data:
+ Crash Reports
+ Viewed screens data
+Aggregated usage statistics
+App events data
4.2.1 Crash reports
4.2.2 Aggregated usage statistics
Ummm... WTF happened to the description paragraph for Viewed Screens Data?
Good ol' child pornographers and terrorists, the ubiquitous go-to for governments when they want to convince their citizens intrusion of their privacy is reasonable.
Fight fire with fire. Tell them we need encryption to keep child pornographers from hacking our internet-facing baby monitors.
(1) The government doesn't have any choice in the matter.
Precisely. The code is already public domain. Come and take my encryption away? Haha. Good one.
Oh, fuck, Wayland doesn't have a paste buffer? Kill it with fire!!!
is in-browser support for BitTorrent so there can be better trust.
How many root certificates does Microsoft hold and how long did it take to recover the 147 that were lost? Tech news posted to Slashdot tends to be a little skeletal and runs on the principle of "better late than never."
343 total, and they're required to be audited annually. It doesn't take a mathematician to see how old thier tarball was!
..Before we find out they were running SSLv2 and got DROWN'ed?
That's why I kept my comment limited to the omnidirectional radiator realm where I have experience ;-)
You're both wrong. EIRP on an omni antenna such as TV or FM is usually about 10:1. I should know, I maintain two TV transmitters and five FM transmitters. Example. One of my rigs produces 1645 watts of RF energy into an antenna with ~9db of gain, which gets me to my EIRP of 15kW.
Top 5 reasons why Arch Linux sucks:
1) Lead arch developer got his computer hacked 3 times. see: https://web.archive.org/web/20... 2) Unstable. Go check out arch's forum instead of listening to the fanboy to see the enormous amounts of issues. 3) Unprofessional. Arch isn't used in any professional environment for a good reason. Made by amateurs. 4) Community. Pretentious, trendy, ricer, hippie morons. 5) Forum. Full of noob questions (can't help it as majority is ex-ubuntu users)
Top 5 reasons why Arch Linux sucks
1) That was 2005. Cut the guy some slack, Arch wasn't even really a "thing" yet. Show us a recent breach?
2) Unstable? Citation please? Other than "go read the forum"...
3) Unprofessional? See above. It seems you missed the whole point of a rolling-release distro geared for developers. Nobody in their right mind would replace RHEL with Arch and it was never meant to! That is not to say professionals do not use arch. You tried to hard to make this a black-and-white debate.
4) Now you've totally lost it. Calling Arch users "trendy" is just stupid. We are like 1% of the Linux user base and most of us are into esoteric stuff.
5) Show me a distro who's forum not full of noob questions. That's pretty much what they exist for.
2) The valves landed harshly leading to valve seat wear. The SAE paper suggested using a method for softer valve landings.
I am just a computer nerd, but perhaps they need to rethink the valve all together to achieve a cam-less engine. Maybe an electronic trap door that slides open and closed really fast would work better. It wouldn't need a rod to push it along the Z-axis and there's no longer a valve seat to even worry about!
I've found it a lot more difficult to deal with the issues affecting my various Linux desktops since Lennart started Poettering around with things.
# systemctl start redhot-poker@myeyes.service
To realize this has nothing to do with the purpose-built "sex-couch" by the same name. And boy, was that a weird moment!
I did go to the link in an incognito window just to check. It is in fact StartsWithABang's blog.
You had to go there to find that out? www.forbes.com/sites/StartsWithABang/ is a pretty good hint. Why click?
I'll get you, my pretty, and your little dog, too!
Spoiler Alert: I know what happens next. The house falls on the bitch.
That must be why the FBI is having trouble hiring hackers because they can't pass the "MJ" test.
..for longer than I've had my Slashdot UID. If it hurt my IQ, I didn't notice.
These are great for ISPs, Google, and Amazon where power saving is important. Think nodes in clusters. Server 2012R2 has an arm port and has hyper-v too.
Power costs are astronomical in these environment's
It will also be great for more-or-less embedded applications like firewalls, storage arrays, de-duplicators, media server/transcoders, etc where you need a healthy CPU and great ethernet bandwidth. I think they on the right path here in terms of an efficient platform for SoC-based appliance manufacturers, where watt-hungry dual and quad-core Intel chips have been the de facto choice. Atom provided an option for those craving a more efficient chip, but IMHO, while it works in clusters, it never performed well enough to stand alone. It may seem like a bold maneuver to some, it is not like they are proposing a new (or even "dead") architecture--ARM is well established and it should be little sweat for developers to adopt. I would love to see this work out for AMD, it is a decent strategy seeing as how they haven't been able to catch up to Intel in the desktop market for quite some time.
Because of the ease of counterfeiting alloys, the coins would need to be made of pure precious metal. Then we're back to an age old problem, namely, the hands which said precious metals lie in.
A DRAM cell goes through trillions of cycles in its live time.
Typical DDR4 (2133) runs at a little over 1 GHz, or a billion cycles per second of operation.
We're in the quadrillions scale, not trillions.
Maybe he meant "cycles during which its own state is changed". They get less wear coasting for a few quadrillion laps than they do altering the value a few trillion times.
I don't get why cell phone manufacturers don't have a feature to record a proper horizontal video while holding the phone vertically.
What they should do instead is flash some kind of warning on the screen that prompts the user to hold their phone like a camera before "filming"
One software, two softwares, right? One hardware, two hardwares. One information, two informations. One firmware, two firmwares. Right? And when you correct someone ("it is one PIECE of software, or one PIECE of firmware"), the response is "English is a changing language" NO. Pardon me whilst I go eat some toasts.
The OP was not making a grammatical objection.. He was clearly objecting to the fact that they called FreeBSD "Unix-like" when it *IS* Unix.
animated content is much harder for the 8-bit encoding. It's the hard edges with high contrast cell shading.
Nonsense. Animation is optimized for compression.. It's already dithered to a limited color set! Whole swathes of pixels get the same value. Sure, you might be able to SEE the compression.. But it is a breeze for the hardware, and bitrates can be dramatically reduced compared to the baseband 4-2-2 video.
How long before the insurance scammers figure out how to "bait" these new Volvi into crashing? This seems like the perfect neck-injury con-job just waiting to happen.