Let's say this is a snack dispensing machine. You accidentally discover that if you bump the machine in a particular location, food drops without you putting any money in. You do this repeatedly. Has a crime occurred?
The standard IS open in that during definition of it anyone (paying to be a member) can contribute, provide feedback, and vote. If you meant free as in beer, they could have required that, but then none of the corporations that did the R&D would have participated and we'd have many "standards" and not just one.
It did look strange when CNN called Ohio a win or Obama when the numbers showed Romney ahead. What they did is inlude projections from to be reported counties based on historical voting record.
With Google's current pricing they will likely lose money until the achieve enough regular income to cover the costs of acquiring hardware, powering them, and supporting them. I don't know how many customers it'll take before Google breaks even and starts making a profit, but it's probably not a small number. So even though Google has a plan to monetize this, there's no guarantee they'll make a profit (otherwise Google App Engine would be expanding), and no guarantee they'll keep dumping money in an unprofitable side business. Given their track record, I may try them out for some capacity while keeping most of it in EC2 or Azure.
Apple is not making any claims on patents on the general idea of a tablet. They asserting design patents on specific design elements. If this guy's tablet invention shows prior art to Apple's designs patents, then those patents should be invalidated. Repeating the "rectangle with a screen" rhetoric is more akin to religion than science.
In large datacenters, power and cooling costs have become a significant part of the TCO. For smaller server rooms x86 compatibility is probably more important.
CTO: it'll cost about $2000 per employee to retrain all our employees due to cost of trainers and time off for training. In addition, we nned to spend more money to convert our archived documents. CEO: don't forget to include the cost in changing how we work with our suppliers and partners GM: rofl, exec3 you stupid
The reality is that all software ships with bugs. Some known and some unknown. Typically it depends on how easy it is for the customer to find, what is the impact to the customer, cost to fix, and risk of regression. Given that software is typically patched after shipping, it means even more bugs get shipped rather than slipping the ship date.
Games will be discussed at E3 which is in a couple of weeks
Let's say this is a snack dispensing machine. You accidentally discover that if you bump the machine in a particular location, food drops without you putting any money in. You do this repeatedly. Has a crime occurred?
The standard IS open in that during definition of it anyone (paying to be a member) can contribute, provide feedback, and vote. If you meant free as in beer, they could have required that, but then none of the corporations that did the R&D would have participated and we'd have many "standards" and not just one.
Or a computer who looks like a human...
If all teachers had guns, they would be targeted first. Columbine had security guards w/ guns.
If that was truly the reason, then people would not be allowed to read books/magazines or simply take a nap.
Doesn't significant profit indicate that their products are priced correctly?
The Republicans filibustered everything. Their number one goal was to prevent Obama from getting a second term.
It did look strange when CNN called Ohio a win or Obama when the numbers showed Romney ahead. What they did is inlude projections from to be reported counties based on historical voting record.
Some people will laugh at this idea, but cloud computing is a viable alternative.
How is marketing involved in an employment ad for an engineer?
More likely he went in dressed normally and left the door open for himself. Got geared up. Went back in.
With Google's current pricing they will likely lose money until the achieve enough regular income to cover the costs of acquiring hardware, powering them, and supporting them. I don't know how many customers it'll take before Google breaks even and starts making a profit, but it's probably not a small number. So even though Google has a plan to monetize this, there's no guarantee they'll make a profit (otherwise Google App Engine would be expanding), and no guarantee they'll keep dumping money in an unprofitable side business. Given their track record, I may try them out for some capacity while keeping most of it in EC2 or Azure.
16:9 is not better than 16:10 for side by side given the same horizontal resolution, it's worse.
Apple is not making any claims on patents on the general idea of a tablet. They asserting design patents on specific design elements. If this guy's tablet invention shows prior art to Apple's designs patents, then those patents should be invalidated. Repeating the "rectangle with a screen" rhetoric is more akin to religion than science.
It's easier to clean a screen than a keyboard or mouse
Who's racist now? Blank Man was played by Damon Wayans, not Chris Rock.
RIM shipped 500k Playbooks, not sold
Google bought Android. They didn't write it themselves.
This is about using Intel as a fab producing Apple's A5 chips, not Apple switching to an Intel based chip
How do you know that ie9 doesn't handle this correctly?
In large datacenters, power and cooling costs have become a significant part of the TCO. For smaller server rooms x86 compatibility is probably more important.
CTO: it'll cost about $2000 per employee to retrain all our employees due to cost of trainers and time off for training. In addition, we nned to spend more money to convert our archived documents.
CEO: don't forget to include the cost in changing how we work with our suppliers and partners
GM: rofl, exec3 you stupid
You do realize that Paul Allen still owns a reported 138 million shares of MSFT?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_allen#Microsoft
The reality is that all software ships with bugs. Some known and some unknown. Typically it depends on how easy it is for the customer to find, what is the impact to the customer, cost to fix, and risk of regression. Given that software is typically patched after shipping, it means even more bugs get shipped rather than slipping the ship date.