Easy, write your own drivers. Too expensive? Then your software would be more expensive or take longer to develop (usually the same thing unless you're self employed).
Actually the embed code is smarter than that. It embeds the most supported player your browser has. Uninstall Flash and check it out, if you have support for WebM or H.264. If not you will want to keep Flash around - which is still the most installed standard video player on the market.
Not true. Many industries have in-house development groups completely distinct from IT which manages infrastructure. Retail, Banking, Aerospace, Pharma, Energy - all have need of custom bespoke software and not all companies want to out-source to a consulting firm.
CS is what you learn. Programming is what you do. Very few people have a job in CS, which means they experiment and devise new ways to compute things:) Typically this also means advanced maths.
I was told recently by a friend who recruits that software development is at 4% unemployment in the US - mostly as a lack of finding qualified applicants.
Video does help, you see cadence and sequence much more effectively. You see the actual env being targeted which may not be the same as your own but with the context you can map it to your env more easily.
It also doesn't fund you well enough to do "big" ideas on your own. OTOH something like Kickstarter does give access to this kind of funding as long as it's a Good(TM) idea and either has broad social value or has high niche value social or financial.
The Federal Reserve is backed up by the national debt. The more debt, the more reserve notes available. The value of a reserve note or Dollar aka the inflation index is primarily based on the debt to volume of currency ratio but is now heavily influenced by international bond holdings and the local economies of those nations. To offset the influence of those bonds we are increasing inflation to dillute the value of the bonds. Once dilluted properly we can then buy back the debt at a reduced cost, "retire" old currency to take it out of circulation and thereby swindle the Chinese out of Billions hopefully having paid for two oil wars in the process. There will be collateral damage of course but there always is.
I can see this as a way to bail out France from their banking crisis while spinning good PR in some camps, letting France save face, and increasing jobs for lower income workers. Hopefully it is a short term strategic maneuver.
Earthquakes happen, tsunamis happen. That they happened to a facility built ~30 years ago with a faulty design (it required an operational pump to maintain cooling, bad design) - that can be avoided.
The fact that humanity still has aging nuclear facilities is a result of your kind of fearmongering. We work with more dangerous substances on a daily basis than you may imagine. Radioactive fallout is certainly one of the worst potential long term problems as compared to chemical spills, weaponized biotics, etc. yet it's death toll is minor. An airplane crash kills more.
It's unfortunate that we've seen another setback to ubiquitous nuclear power - one that could have been avoided.
If they focus on live sports with video chat for virtual game parties they could have a win. It's an under served market in this space - likely because of existing contracts of course but if it could be done... Imagine watching favorite sports teams with friends abroad or big game face-offs between rivals and being able to say "eat it" to your rival fans.
There are no consequences for a lone actor, not in real life. Why would there be in a fictional game scenario? You live then you die.
OTOH, if the fate of others - family, friends, peers, community, is affected - then you have consequences. You live you do things that impact others, you die and everyone around you has to deal with the consequences. Logically bind individual actions to the team of players and peer pressure will kick in to not do stupid things. Alternatively the player will lose the benefit of the team if they disown him.
Why? Be in operations 2 days a week. One to process and one to deliver. Streamline around that schedule. Want low rates and delivery anywhere, wait a week. That's the only viable option and Congress should enact it overriding all prior contracts.
But that's true of every disease or genetic annoyance. Why invent a cure when you can invent a treatment? The only cures include heinously expensive surgery and artificial device implantation with potential lifelong anti-rejection treatments.
OTOH if there were cures available countries like Sweden with full healthcare coverage would have them, so it's unlikely that they exist but are being suppressed.
3rd party solutions are nice stopgaps for those who can roll their own. It helps prove out the use case without the high investment in R&D and support.
They are 7. You underestimate. I was building transformer robots from cardboard, rubber bands, and adhesives. They transformed and were built as components of bigger robots, ala constructicons or Voltron. I also was programming games from books using basic, a commodore 128, 5.25 floppies and a BBS login over a cradle based phone modem at 2.4 baud. Yes I knew what each was and read up on how to make the most of what I had.
Easy, write your own drivers. Too expensive? Then your software would be more expensive or take longer to develop (usually the same thing unless you're self employed).
The working group has stated that the draft is the standard and will be for ever more.
Actually the embed code is smarter than that. It embeds the most supported player your browser has. Uninstall Flash and check it out, if you have support for WebM or H.264. If not you will want to keep Flash around - which is still the most installed standard video player on the market.
Not true. Many industries have in-house development groups completely distinct from IT which manages infrastructure. Retail, Banking, Aerospace, Pharma, Energy - all have need of custom bespoke software and not all companies want to out-source to a consulting firm.
IT caps out at 100k in the US. A solution architect with a CS degree can make 160k easily. There is your difference.
CS is what you learn. Programming is what you do. Very few people have a job in CS, which means they experiment and devise new ways to compute things :) Typically this also means advanced maths.
I was told recently by a friend who recruits that software development is at 4% unemployment in the US - mostly as a lack of finding qualified applicants.
StuffIt? BOMArchive is the default Mac app.
Video does help, you see cadence and sequence much more effectively. You see the actual env being targeted which may not be the same as your own but with the context you can map it to your env more easily.
It also doesn't fund you well enough to do "big" ideas on your own. OTOH something like Kickstarter does give access to this kind of funding as long as it's a Good(TM) idea and either has broad social value or has high niche value social or financial.
The Federal Reserve is backed up by the national debt. The more debt, the more reserve notes available. The value of a reserve note or Dollar aka the inflation index is primarily based on the debt to volume of currency ratio but is now heavily influenced by international bond holdings and the local economies of those nations. To offset the influence of those bonds we are increasing inflation to dillute the value of the bonds. Once dilluted properly we can then buy back the debt at a reduced cost, "retire" old currency to take it out of circulation and thereby swindle the Chinese out of Billions hopefully having paid for two oil wars in the process. There will be collateral damage of course but there always is.
I've been using dots for > decade. It used to be a standard way to do first.last@domain.tld.
SMS primarily, then phone to talk, then in person to do stuff. For acquaintances Facebook - it's the new email list.
I can see this as a way to bail out France from their banking crisis while spinning good PR in some camps, letting France save face, and increasing jobs for lower income workers. Hopefully it is a short term strategic maneuver.
Earthquakes happen, tsunamis happen. That they happened to a facility built ~30 years ago with a faulty design (it required an operational pump to maintain cooling, bad design) - that can be avoided.
The fact that humanity still has aging nuclear facilities is a result of your kind of fearmongering. We work with more dangerous substances on a daily basis than you may imagine. Radioactive fallout is certainly one of the worst potential long term problems as compared to chemical spills, weaponized biotics, etc. yet it's death toll is minor. An airplane crash kills more.
It's unfortunate that we've seen another setback to ubiquitous nuclear power - one that could have been avoided.
If they focus on live sports with video chat for virtual game parties they could have a win. It's an under served market in this space - likely because of existing contracts of course but if it could be done... Imagine watching favorite sports teams with friends abroad or big game face-offs between rivals and being able to say "eat it" to your rival fans.
There are no consequences for a lone actor, not in real life. Why would there be in a fictional game scenario? You live then you die.
OTOH, if the fate of others - family, friends, peers, community, is affected - then you have consequences. You live you do things that impact others, you die and everyone around you has to deal with the consequences. Logically bind individual actions to the team of players and peer pressure will kick in to not do stupid things. Alternatively the player will lose the benefit of the team if they disown him.
Why? Be in operations 2 days a week. One to process and one to deliver. Streamline around that schedule. Want low rates and delivery anywhere, wait a week. That's the only viable option and Congress should enact it overriding all prior contracts.
I could live with getting mail once a week. If it's urgent send a courier or FedEx or something else.
But that's true of every disease or genetic annoyance. Why invent a cure when you can invent a treatment? The only cures include heinously expensive surgery and artificial device implantation with potential lifelong anti-rejection treatments.
OTOH if there were cures available countries like Sweden with full healthcare coverage would have them, so it's unlikely that they exist but are being suppressed.
3) your purchase is recorded somewhere and likely being used to profile you.
8) making the book takes power, storing the book is an opportunity cost and takes some power.
These may be on the edge of statistical significance but can be relevant if you buy enough books frequently.
How about pedal power? Get your daily exercise but avoid the long walk through the city and get there faster as a group?
3rd party solutions are nice stopgaps for those who can roll their own. It helps prove out the use case without the high investment in R&D and support.
They are 7. You underestimate. I was building transformer robots from cardboard, rubber bands, and adhesives. They transformed and were built as components of bigger robots, ala constructicons or Voltron. I also was programming games from books using basic, a commodore 128, 5.25 floppies and a BBS login over a cradle based phone modem at 2.4 baud. Yes I knew what each was and read up on how to make the most of what I had.
How about if we burn some food to fuel the vehicle that gets the remaining surplus food to the starving populace?