Obviously the system has global multi-site datacenters, rfid implants, radioactive decay biometric rsa tokens and the system gives world class hand jobs.
I actually used it a good deal during my field engineering days to calculate distances for certain things.
I did quite fine later on during college and even learned far more appreciate for abstract mathematics. In this particular case she really was quite the devil.
Many years later I would get even with her. While out on a bit of a date I ran into the witch who was also out at the same restaurant. Now, my date and myself were about to leave when I noticed HER there with someone else. In fairness, her husband had been put into jail many years ago for man slaughter. He struck someone with a ketchup bottle and it apparently did the poor fellow in.
On my way out I informed her waitress that the woman at her table was quite literally shouting for some ketchup and she really should hurry.
I'm not really about being the better man, but I do still get a chuckle out of it to this day.
It's fairly common practice to keep the raw video in case you need to do something with it. It's generally higher quality, free from effects and can be remixed as needed. In the event the finished product is wiped out then the show can be reproduced at some cost.
With one of the previous companies I was with we spent so little on technology that it wasn't uncommon to lose the primary file server. Eventually, after the third or fourth reload plus reproducing they eventually opted to invest in some backup technologies and secondary file servers.
While it is April fools day I have seen this scenario too many times. I believe there is some rule to humor that indicates a situation is humorous when it is on the unbelievable side. This doesn't strike me as terribly unbelievable.
3D has always give me a headache, but that really isn't the largest issue.
Finding a seat at the theater which doesn't have a sub-par angle of enjoyment. Sadly, even making it 30 minutes ahead of time doesn't really do it because there were a billion other people who decided to attempt the same tactic.
On the plus side they at least haven't converted every room to 3D projectors and there is generally an alternative screen which has the 2D version.
I built a reaaaallly cheap PC for a friend. I consider his computer to be a fire hazard and he is out of work. I'm a good friend, but I'm not a great friend. Thus, I did everything I could to build a stable, but extremely inexpensive system. (Minus the used expensive parts I had on the shelf).
While it would have only cost $20 to buy a multi-core processor I actually opted to just unlock a Sempron. It was surprising to find how many of the little things start adding up to fairly decent cost savings. Once it was complete the little bugger was surprisingly fast for older tech. It doesn't quite rival my quad core, but it would have replaced my last system.
It is a derail approach and it is quite effective in some cases.
I've seen communities, in gaming circles, which wish to suppress a negative or otherwise harmful piece of information from wide spread distributions/discussion. In forums, often the tact for a heated thread which has devolved into a series of inflammatory posts is to lock said thread. Thus the target objective is to reach a thread lock and end the discussion on the topic.
Derail in this fashion against slashdot would only function for a limited amount of time until moderation starts to kick in. Unless the opposing force is able to saturate the thread with more comments then the total available pool of moderation points available.
Personally, I've already started looking at other carriers, but I do have some time to make the switch. These merges are never very quick and give me ample time to decide on who my next overlord should be. I really did enjoy tmobile and the customer service.
The built in secure erase function of SATA disks is superior to any DOD wipe pattern available. The wipe function ignores bad sectors and simply writes out data in random patterns while offsetting the head randomly into neighboring tracks. It also has the advantage of being horribly quick despite massive disk size.
Now actually getting the secure erase function to work properly is sometimes a bit annoying. You need a kernel, tools, chipset and drive to support the features. Even then it can still be somewhat sporadic due to the fairly new code.
It was one of the original routers from 203AD. (well 203ADish).
Because at the time there was not nearly a large enough base for IP based data transmissions they relied more heavily on humans. This router utilizes various symbols that were popular among the time to indicate direction. With a bit of a wheel you can turn the directions to various paths and thereby facilitate the routing of information or rather people.
All in all, it is more like a road sign which can be shifted this way or that.
To answer the question, I'm afraid there is no update to this model because at the time of it's conception there was no implementation of IPV6 or IPV4.
The laptop produces more heat, has more weight and gets less battery life.
When the issue gets down to it's core fundamental philosophy it is really different beasts for different tasks. I don't really prefer to do any heavy usage on a tablet, but I do rather enjoying flipping through a few websites or news outlets while listening to some music. It's not exactly a heavy work load by any means.
Stating you feel the cost for current tablets is over priced for their functionality is something I would certainly not disagree with.
A DSO line can be provisioned as a channelized T1 or PRI. There is quite a distinction in how they operate and the costs associated with the two types of circuits. The reduced throughput for a channelized T1 is because there is no dedicated signaling channel. PRI lines achieve more bandwidth per channel with the added benefit of caller identification, but with the drawback of a reduced channel. (Hence 23 lines versus 24)
So standards are great and all if they actually followed. The implementation of v92 and comparative amount of modems which would function correctly seemed a bit paltry. This varied amongst manufacturers of both consumer and carrier equipment. Furthermore, the issues amongst these were generally magnified by the level of opposition manufacturers held amongst each other.
Case in point, when Lucent purchased Ascend and began releasing Lucent brand firmware there was a distinct shift in the chipset support. In fact, suddenly the same equipment which would connect with flawless response degraded under the new lucent changes. Not surprisingly, the same modems which previously failed miserably suddenly were better supported. The dreaded and awful lucent winmodem which required more processing power then most desktops at the time could provide. This trend was so awful that we ceased upgrades until they could be evaluated and this behavior wasn't limited to our Ascend equipment.
This is commonly why customers would in and ask what the most compatible end user equipment we supported. On the surface, any protocol compatible modem would be supported, but the reality is that it may not have been an ideal connection.
This assumes the ISP has purchased PRI lines which would connect at a speed of 53,300. The cheaper alternative is to purchase vanilla lines which do not have the PRI tariff and wind up with 48,800 bits per second. The other drawback to purchasing PRI lines is the dedicated channel for caller identification. In fairness, being frugal can actually spread one channel of caller id for up to three PRI lines, but regardless it still costs more for only a fractional bit more of bandwidth.
Now, here is the kicker, v92 actually had worse compression then v42bis, but good luck negotiating a v42bis connection.
When I could actually negotiate it on the gear we had it was simply quite beautiful to get the compression ratio of zip over dialup, but again this was only for items which would benefit from compression.
With that in mind, if you could negotiate a v42bis connection, downloading 17gb would be faster on a 32kbps connection if the compression ratio was 50% or greater.
I find people want to hear news that is inline with their beliefs. News aggregation unless from a series of sites which share bias can and do inject news of a variety of sources. This is why sites or news outlets which feature heavy and unspoken bias will always be popular. This does not concede the growing possibility of a diminished presence, but there will always be a market.
That said, my iPad has been reduced to a news tablet machine and pdf reader. I don't particularly like to browse heavily on the unit and I've not really found any applications that really make me need it. Sadly, I wanted to use it as a couch surfer, but a netbook with a real keyboard would have accomplished this goal better.
I'll look into it eventually, but I have to like something a great deal to provide support. (ie, hand out the cash)
Arbor devices do a good job at dropping any of the attacks which are based on malformed packets. Since you can stack them there is only a limit to your budget.
This is why there are two fold attacks used for larger sites that have to use both valid attacks and simple muscle. There are additional tactics which can be employed, but they rely on exploiting the weaker links of an application farm.
The problem with out gunning a DDOS botnet is that it takes a lot of resources that are not available to many people.
While I understand the need from a corporate perspective I am somewhat hesitant to vote for a system which employs the use of remote gags at the touch of an automated corporate button. I'm not saying that the devices would make a mistake, but there are some corporations out there that would employ these services ruthlessly with a wide impact as possible. Of course if they happen to get the wrong address they really can't be bothered with the consequences.
Obviously the system has global multi-site datacenters, rfid implants, radioactive decay biometric rsa tokens and the system gives world class hand jobs.
Who cares how they found a way!
I've already cracked my printer open and began rewinding the motors with more copper.
When I'm done it's going to have exhaust valves that release pressure like a turbo charged car.
Sure it might spray a fine cloud of ink each type I print, but at least it will be faster.
Stay away from my precious!
I actually used it a good deal during my field engineering days to calculate distances for certain things.
I did quite fine later on during college and even learned far more appreciate for abstract mathematics. In this particular case she really was quite the devil.
Many years later I would get even with her. While out on a bit of a date I ran into the witch who was also out at the same restaurant. Now, my date and myself were about to leave when I noticed HER there with someone else. In fairness, her husband had been put into jail many years ago for man slaughter. He struck someone with a ketchup bottle and it apparently did the poor fellow in.
On my way out I informed her waitress that the woman at her table was quite literally shouting for some ketchup and she really should hurry.
I'm not really about being the better man, but I do still get a chuckle out of it to this day.
Algebra, Algebra II, Geometry and Calculus were available at my school.
I remember not doing so hot in geometry, but the teacher was also evil incarnate.
Spamming Brent Spiner, Johnny Bravo and Linus Torvalds!
There is no actual verification on those little forms. Though I did get a strange look for the Johnny Bravo one I submitted.
One of my friends even made one with the name Edgar Poe and he used this card specifically to purchase beer.
{You/I} {am/are} {winning/smoking} {winning/crack}.
It's fairly common practice to keep the raw video in case you need to do something with it. It's generally higher quality, free from effects and can be remixed as needed. In the event the finished product is wiped out then the show can be reproduced at some cost.
With one of the previous companies I was with we spent so little on technology that it wasn't uncommon to lose the primary file server. Eventually, after the third or fourth reload plus reproducing they eventually opted to invest in some backup technologies and secondary file servers.
While it is April fools day I have seen this scenario too many times. I believe there is some rule to humor that indicates a situation is humorous when it is on the unbelievable side. This doesn't strike me as terribly unbelievable.
3D has always give me a headache, but that really isn't the largest issue.
Finding a seat at the theater which doesn't have a sub-par angle of enjoyment. Sadly, even making it 30 minutes ahead of time doesn't really do it because there were a billion other people who decided to attempt the same tactic.
On the plus side they at least haven't converted every room to 3D projectors and there is generally an alternative screen which has the 2D version.
Comon, proton packs would be awesome.
It has the added benefit of the fire department also being able to reconcile poltergeist infestations.
I built a reaaaallly cheap PC for a friend. I consider his computer to be a fire hazard and he is out of work. I'm a good friend, but I'm not a great friend. Thus, I did everything I could to build a stable, but extremely inexpensive system. (Minus the used expensive parts I had on the shelf).
While it would have only cost $20 to buy a multi-core processor I actually opted to just unlock a Sempron. It was surprising to find how many of the little things start adding up to fairly decent cost savings. Once it was complete the little bugger was surprisingly fast for older tech. It doesn't quite rival my quad core, but it would have replaced my last system.
I'm no grammar fanatic, but I just couldn't pass up such an opportunity.
It's like saying, "I'm leaving all of this free crack here.... for free.... to anyone" in a room with a crackhead.
I'm of the new school and prefer rocket brain....
Furthermore, I'm troubled that you continue to speak to her about how she feels about the MacBook.
Why on earth would you give your MacBook Pro to your dead wife?
It is a derail approach and it is quite effective in some cases.
I've seen communities, in gaming circles, which wish to suppress a negative or otherwise harmful piece of information from wide spread distributions/discussion. In forums, often the tact for a heated thread which has devolved into a series of inflammatory posts is to lock said thread. Thus the target objective is to reach a thread lock and end the discussion on the topic.
Derail in this fashion against slashdot would only function for a limited amount of time until moderation starts to kick in. Unless the opposing force is able to saturate the thread with more comments then the total available pool of moderation points available.
Personally, I've already started looking at other carriers, but I do have some time to make the switch. These merges are never very quick and give me ample time to decide on who my next overlord should be. I really did enjoy tmobile and the customer service.
The built in secure erase function of SATA disks is superior to any DOD wipe pattern available. The wipe function ignores bad sectors and simply writes out data in random patterns while offsetting the head randomly into neighboring tracks. It also has the advantage of being horribly quick despite massive disk size.
Now actually getting the secure erase function to work properly is sometimes a bit annoying. You need a kernel, tools, chipset and drive to support the features. Even then it can still be somewhat sporadic due to the fairly new code.
It was one of the original routers from 203AD. (well 203ADish).
Because at the time there was not nearly a large enough base for IP based data transmissions they relied more heavily on humans. This router utilizes various symbols that were popular among the time to indicate direction. With a bit of a wheel you can turn the directions to various paths and thereby facilitate the routing of information or rather people.
All in all, it is more like a road sign which can be shifted this way or that.
To answer the question, I'm afraid there is no update to this model because at the time of it's conception there was no implementation of IPV6 or IPV4.
The laptop produces more heat, has more weight and gets less battery life.
When the issue gets down to it's core fundamental philosophy it is really different beasts for different tasks. I don't really prefer to do any heavy usage on a tablet, but I do rather enjoying flipping through a few websites or news outlets while listening to some music. It's not exactly a heavy work load by any means.
Stating you feel the cost for current tablets is over priced for their functionality is something I would certainly not disagree with.
So we take the malaria survivors and we feed them to the healthy.
Everyone is a winner!
A DSO line can be provisioned as a channelized T1 or PRI. There is quite a distinction in how they operate and the costs associated with the two types of circuits. The reduced throughput for a channelized T1 is because there is no dedicated signaling channel. PRI lines achieve more bandwidth per channel with the added benefit of caller identification, but with the drawback of a reduced channel. (Hence 23 lines versus 24)
So standards are great and all if they actually followed. The implementation of v92 and comparative amount of modems which would function correctly seemed a bit paltry. This varied amongst manufacturers of both consumer and carrier equipment. Furthermore, the issues amongst these were generally magnified by the level of opposition manufacturers held amongst each other.
Case in point, when Lucent purchased Ascend and began releasing Lucent brand firmware there was a distinct shift in the chipset support. In fact, suddenly the same equipment which would connect with flawless response degraded under the new lucent changes. Not surprisingly, the same modems which previously failed miserably suddenly were better supported. The dreaded and awful lucent winmodem which required more processing power then most desktops at the time could provide. This trend was so awful that we ceased upgrades until they could be evaluated and this behavior wasn't limited to our Ascend equipment.
This is commonly why customers would in and ask what the most compatible end user equipment we supported. On the surface, any protocol compatible modem would be supported, but the reality is that it may not have been an ideal connection.
This assumes the ISP has purchased PRI lines which would connect at a speed of 53,300. The cheaper alternative is to purchase vanilla lines which do not have the PRI tariff and wind up with 48,800 bits per second. The other drawback to purchasing PRI lines is the dedicated channel for caller identification. In fairness, being frugal can actually spread one channel of caller id for up to three PRI lines, but regardless it still costs more for only a fractional bit more of bandwidth.
Now, here is the kicker, v92 actually had worse compression then v42bis, but good luck negotiating a v42bis connection.
When I could actually negotiate it on the gear we had it was simply quite beautiful to get the compression ratio of zip over dialup, but again this was only for items which would benefit from compression.
With that in mind, if you could negotiate a v42bis connection, downloading 17gb would be faster on a 32kbps connection if the compression ratio was 50% or greater.
I find people want to hear news that is inline with their beliefs. News aggregation unless from a series of sites which share bias can and do inject news of a variety of sources. This is why sites or news outlets which feature heavy and unspoken bias will always be popular. This does not concede the growing possibility of a diminished presence, but there will always be a market.
That said, my iPad has been reduced to a news tablet machine and pdf reader. I don't particularly like to browse heavily on the unit and I've not really found any applications that really make me need it. Sadly, I wanted to use it as a couch surfer, but a netbook with a real keyboard would have accomplished this goal better.
I'll look into it eventually, but I have to like something a great deal to provide support. (ie, hand out the cash)
Arbor devices do a good job at dropping any of the attacks which are based on malformed packets. Since you can stack them there is only a limit to your budget.
This is why there are two fold attacks used for larger sites that have to use both valid attacks and simple muscle. There are additional tactics which can be employed, but they rely on exploiting the weaker links of an application farm.
The problem with out gunning a DDOS botnet is that it takes a lot of resources that are not available to many people.
While I understand the need from a corporate perspective I am somewhat hesitant to vote for a system which employs the use of remote gags at the touch of an automated corporate button. I'm not saying that the devices would make a mistake, but there are some corporations out there that would employ these services ruthlessly with a wide impact as possible. Of course if they happen to get the wrong address they really can't be bothered with the consequences.
I've known some girls that had some weight, but were actually quite attractive.
It probably had to do with them being extra slutty, but I'm a sucker for slutty.