Are any of those any good? I have the whole manual setup right now and the results are stunning, but curious if any of the automatic ones are actually good espresso machines.
By the way, now that you mention it, you can save yourself from hitting shift to get the colon by allowing the semicolon to do the trick. The semicolon has no function that I'm aware of in edit mode anyway.:nmap ; :
Because unlike the SD card, everyone uses the screen.
Seriously, for the minority of people that use SD cards "all the time" and "can't live without memory card readers", go buy an adapter. Not elegant, costs more, yes, well, this is the price for depending on a day to day basis on rapidly antiquating technology.
Here's a list of ports/hardware that I use sometimes: GPIB, RS-232, Floppies (even the half-density ones), CD, DVD, parallel ports. I do use these things occasionally. But not enough to want to carry around a laptop with all that built-in. And from a mass-marketed device (yes, they plan to sell millions of these), it really does not compute.
The thing is, for pro photographers, we already carry around lights, lenses, batteries, cards, chargers, adapters, etc. I even already cary an SD card to USB adapter for those cases where I use someone else's Mac Pro, for instance. Since the vast majority of people do not need floppy disks, CD drives, and random memory cards, removing this orifice (and it's the longest one physically) really makes sense and probably made the layout a lot easier.
Maybe one day cameras will switch to micro USB flash drives and end this entire thing. Oh wait, the macbook pro probably lacks those too:-)
He's totally right, having a specific memory card slot in a computer really isn't that useful these days. Most folks don't ever use them; for those of us who do, it's a mixed bag as to if the card is the right type, and it's not a day-to-day event. If it is day-to-day, buy an adapter. I've used mine only a half dozen times to write Raspberry Pi images, which I easily could have done using another machine and a USB card reader. If having an SD card reader is a deal-breaker, go back to the 90s and get the last Mac with a floppy while you're at it.
All that said, they have removed other useful ports and that is annoying. These are/were ports that many people actually used.
I'm sure apps that need escape, such as terminal and Vim, will have a way to get it mapped to the corner of the touch bar. And as others noted, there's always remapping that caps lock key.
No doubt someone will come out with a little hack to keep the escape key always in the corner.
Would you say though, that when the New York Times posted old version of Trump's tax returns, that they were influencing an election? And this is with data that was stolen too.
I hate both candidates, let me be clear. Both have despicable character, do not appear trustworthy, and come with baggage.
Any useful information about either candidate will influence the election. What the Embassy should have said is that he was influencing an election in a way they didn't like. Or at least, in a way that someone with power in Ecuador doesn't like.
Obviously just the hard disk spinning up and down. Apple should have considered these effects and used a small page file with more ram. Nothing to see here.
Perhaps some of this is circumstantial, perhaps some is accidental. Perhaps. But perhaps some percentage of this really is what it seems (to me) to add up to.
Detecting the failure should be easy, I agree. Could be done with simple analog circuitry or in the digital domain.
I can tell you that in my car there exactly three wires going to the accelerator pedal. And since that is the only place I am inputting the desired accel, this is where a redundant sensor would need to go. I'm sure on the gas engine side there are sensors on the throttle air/gas mixture block, so this would show what the engine actually did. And I would imagine the state for the cruise control is recorded too. But from a "person's foot command" point of view, only one sensor.
If it's like my Honda Civic, "drive by wire," then there is a simple sealed variable resistor installed at the pedal lever. If one wire fails, the encoding ADC will either swing to the top or the bottom of the range. There really isn't a "throttle body" in an electric car.
So it is still possible that the throttle encoding circuit/wires failed and the computer logged a "full press" even though it wasn't pressed at all.
If it actually logged 512 or whatever the max is, I wonder if a normal press of the pedal could have achieved full scale? Maybe.
Their day was already ruined when they chose to operate a military-style operation at the hands of an OS primarily designed for video games and Facebook.
If they "didn't know better" then they were ill-prepared.
Sadly, yes, the U.S. Military had a fair amount of windows in their operations, but they can afford the Microsoft tax to get customizations that others can't.
The fact is, unix and linux comprise 90% of the consumer "computer" market these days. There's Mac OS X/iOS and Linux/Android. The only devices running non-unix-like OSs are genuine windows PCs.
And the other fact is, there were multiple GUI shells before MS-Windows, even on the PC. The GUI as we know it mostly came from Xerox, which Apple copied followed by Microsoft. I would never claim though that any one of these agents is solely responsible for the GUI.
You are correct though about Microsoft and their vision for future products. Destroy, start over, destroy, start over...
Unless these chips somehow share the antenna of the Bluetooth or 3G system -- which is unlikely as the wavelength is vastly different -- you would only pick up the strongest of signals.
I agree though that having a basic analog receiver in every phone could be very handy in emergencies and in rural areas where low power FM is normal and 3G/whatever isn't.
Plus I would just like to use it for music and news.
Ten years ago this would have appeared to be a post from The Onion. I can't believe this is really happening.
I dumped Windows 3.1 for Mac and later Linux, and I haven't really looked back since. Sure I bump into windows now and then, but I don't feel like I've missed out on anything.
But this takes the cake. How ridiculous can you get? They must have seen the writing on the wall and decided to go out with a big hurrah.
Seriously, get a beginner-level job. Write some code for cheap, even for free. Maybe meet a mentor or two while you're at it.
Or if you're a student, march into some department's office that needs programmers (not comp-sci, but something like aerospace engineering where they need programmers and they can't program that well). Offer to help with some professor's project and see where it takes you.
Endorsements are very different than "trying to stop" a candidate.
Having said that, it's never made any sense to me how an objective and "fair" news organization can possibly officially endorse anyone and keep their objectivity. Just doesn't click.
Three Politicians finished using a unisex bathroom.
Hillary Clinton walks to the paper towel dispenser and uses two towels to dry her hands. “It takes me a little longer,” she says.
Bernie Sanders walk to the paper towel dispenser too, and remarks, “I’m not controlled by special interest groups, I only use one by my own decision,” and proceeds to dry his hands with a single towel.
Donald Trump briskly walks to the Dyson. The 430-MPH wind sprays water on the other two politicians. He remarks, “I’m Donald Trump, and I don’t pee on my hands!”
Yes. Carbon fiber can't be used for radomes and such.
But otherwise, the parent poster did an excellent job describing the reasons why the case can't be the antenna and the antenna can't be inside the case unless it is non-conductive. And even then, phones these days fit inside your hand, and the hand is a good insulator for RF.
That said, and back on topic, I have only seen better and better service in the years that I have had a phone. I think I've had maybe two dropped calls in the past 5 years.
Are any of those any good? I have the whole manual setup right now and the results are stunning, but curious if any of the automatic ones are actually good espresso machines.
This is the one paper book that I still keep at-hand for programming. There is no substitute, it is the best. Simple and clear.
It's too bad that C++ is so flexible that such a straight-forward book cannot ever be written for C++.
By the way, now that you mention it, you can save yourself from hitting shift to get the colon by allowing the semicolon to do the trick. The semicolon has no function that I'm aware of in edit mode anyway. :nmap ; :
Because unlike the SD card, everyone uses the screen.
Seriously, for the minority of people that use SD cards "all the time" and "can't live without memory card readers", go buy an adapter. Not elegant, costs more, yes, well, this is the price for depending on a day to day basis on rapidly antiquating technology.
Here's a list of ports/hardware that I use sometimes: GPIB, RS-232, Floppies (even the half-density ones), CD, DVD, parallel ports. I do use these things occasionally. But not enough to want to carry around a laptop with all that built-in. And from a mass-marketed device (yes, they plan to sell millions of these), it really does not compute.
The thing is, for pro photographers, we already carry around lights, lenses, batteries, cards, chargers, adapters, etc. I even already cary an SD card to USB adapter for those cases where I use someone else's Mac Pro, for instance. Since the vast majority of people do not need floppy disks, CD drives, and random memory cards, removing this orifice (and it's the longest one physically) really makes sense and probably made the layout a lot easier.
Maybe one day cameras will switch to micro USB flash drives and end this entire thing. Oh wait, the macbook pro probably lacks those too :-)
He's totally right, having a specific memory card slot in a computer really isn't that useful these days. Most folks don't ever use them; for those of us who do, it's a mixed bag as to if the card is the right type, and it's not a day-to-day event. If it is day-to-day, buy an adapter. I've used mine only a half dozen times to write Raspberry Pi images, which I easily could have done using another machine and a USB card reader. If having an SD card reader is a deal-breaker, go back to the 90s and get the last Mac with a floppy while you're at it.
All that said, they have removed other useful ports and that is annoying. These are/were ports that many people actually used.
I'm sure apps that need escape, such as terminal and Vim, will have a way to get it mapped to the corner of the touch bar. And as others noted, there's always remapping that caps lock key.
No doubt someone will come out with a little hack to keep the escape key always in the corner.
Would you say though, that when the New York Times posted old version of Trump's tax returns, that they were influencing an election? And this is with data that was stolen too.
I hate both candidates, let me be clear. Both have despicable character, do not appear trustworthy, and come with baggage.
Any useful information about either candidate will influence the election. What the Embassy should have said is that he was influencing an election in a way they didn't like. Or at least, in a way that someone with power in Ecuador doesn't like.
Meh, (analog) ham radio is still working fine...
Obviously just the hard disk spinning up and down. Apple should have considered these effects and used a small page file with more ram. Nothing to see here.
Back to VisiCalc.
So there may be some stories in that list that are not accurate or are exaggerated. I appreciate your investigating some of this.
My thoughts are, if maybe a handful out of these actually have some substance, then this is worth looking at.
Next time I won't pick the first result on a google search... But I still find it relevant.
http://www.whatreallyhappened....
Scroll down to "body count"
Perhaps some of this is circumstantial, perhaps some is accidental. Perhaps. But perhaps some percentage of this really is what it seems (to me) to add up to.
Here's the list: (scroll down to "THE CLINTON BODY-COUNT")
http://www.whatreallyhappened....
Going to testify against the mob is probably a safer bet.
Detecting the failure should be easy, I agree. Could be done with simple analog circuitry or in the digital domain.
I can tell you that in my car there exactly three wires going to the accelerator pedal. And since that is the only place I am inputting the desired accel, this is where a redundant sensor would need to go. I'm sure on the gas engine side there are sensors on the throttle air/gas mixture block, so this would show what the engine actually did. And I would imagine the state for the cruise control is recorded too. But from a "person's foot command" point of view, only one sensor.
If it's like my Honda Civic, "drive by wire," then there is a simple sealed variable resistor installed at the pedal lever. If one wire fails, the encoding ADC will either swing to the top or the bottom of the range. There really isn't a "throttle body" in an electric car.
So it is still possible that the throttle encoding circuit/wires failed and the computer logged a "full press" even though it wasn't pressed at all.
If it actually logged 512 or whatever the max is, I wonder if a normal press of the pedal could have achieved full scale? Maybe.
Their day was already ruined when they chose to operate a military-style operation at the hands of an OS primarily designed for video games and Facebook.
If they "didn't know better" then they were ill-prepared.
Sadly, yes, the U.S. Military had a fair amount of windows in their operations, but they can afford the Microsoft tax to get customizations that others can't.
The fact is, unix and linux comprise 90% of the consumer "computer" market these days. There's Mac OS X/iOS and Linux/Android. The only devices running non-unix-like OSs are genuine windows PCs.
And the other fact is, there were multiple GUI shells before MS-Windows, even on the PC. The GUI as we know it mostly came from Xerox, which Apple copied followed by Microsoft. I would never claim though that any one of these agents is solely responsible for the GUI.
You are correct though about Microsoft and their vision for future products. Destroy, start over, destroy, start over...
Unless these chips somehow share the antenna of the Bluetooth or 3G system -- which is unlikely as the wavelength is vastly different -- you would only pick up the strongest of signals.
I agree though that having a basic analog receiver in every phone could be very handy in emergencies and in rural areas where low power FM is normal and 3G/whatever isn't.
Plus I would just like to use it for music and news.
I mentioned this to my wife and she said, "Microsoft is in the phone business?"
Ten years ago this would have appeared to be a post from The Onion. I can't believe this is really happening.
I dumped Windows 3.1 for Mac and later Linux, and I haven't really looked back since. Sure I bump into windows now and then, but I don't feel like I've missed out on anything.
But this takes the cake. How ridiculous can you get? They must have seen the writing on the wall and decided to go out with a big hurrah.
Seriously, get a beginner-level job. Write some code for cheap, even for free. Maybe meet a mentor or two while you're at it.
Or if you're a student, march into some department's office that needs programmers (not comp-sci, but something like aerospace engineering where they need programmers and they can't program that well). Offer to help with some professor's project and see where it takes you.
Endorsements are very different than "trying to stop" a candidate.
Having said that, it's never made any sense to me how an objective and "fair" news organization can possibly officially endorse anyone and keep their objectivity. Just doesn't click.
The obvious answer is "None."
Facebook should not interfere with the political process. It has no responsibility to be a political entity.
If you don't like Trump, then it is YOU that has the responsibility to do something about it. Not a private corporation.
Three Politicians finished using a unisex bathroom.
Hillary Clinton walks to the paper towel dispenser and uses two towels to dry her hands. “It takes me a little longer,” she says.
Bernie Sanders walk to the paper towel dispenser too, and remarks, “I’m not controlled by special interest groups, I only use one by my own decision,” and proceeds to dry his hands with a single towel.
Donald Trump briskly walks to the Dyson. The 430-MPH wind sprays water on the other two politicians. He remarks, “I’m Donald Trump, and I don’t pee on my hands!”
Yes. Carbon fiber can't be used for radomes and such.
But otherwise, the parent poster did an excellent job describing the reasons why the case can't be the antenna and the antenna can't be inside the case unless it is non-conductive. And even then, phones these days fit inside your hand, and the hand is a good insulator for RF.
That said, and back on topic, I have only seen better and better service in the years that I have had a phone. I think I've had maybe two dropped calls in the past 5 years.