It's not Intel or a stick, but PC Engine has a board that uses AMD's jaguar CPU, and had three Intel gigabit nice, mSata, supports SD booting, and had two mini pcie slots so you can add WiFi.
It's over kill for what your asking for, it's still small enough to be portable. At the board is under $150 http://www.pcengines.ch/apu2b4.htm
It's likely not beer sales, but the equipment and ingredients to make beer. I've only been brewing for two years, but I've noticed an large uptick of people in my local home brew store every time I'm there.
The HDMI spec does support having an Ethernet connection over the cable. If you had a receiver that you used an Ethernet connection on, it could share that connection with the TV without you realizing.
When you register you get a single tail for all of your drone. The registration form isn't online yet, but I haven't heard anything about registering each one that have if you have multiples.
Regarding searching by the tail. Yes, you need the actual tail. But click back one page to the master search list. You have the ability to search by state and county. Every plane with their tail, and addresses of the owners is listed for that county. I wouldn't put it past the FAA to duplicating this exact search for the new list.
Except with it being public, someone could lookup your registration number via your name/address. They could then start flying it around an airport, the white house, or some other no fly zone with a drone that uses your number.
They still do this today. Cable companies even mess with the bitrates for different channels. An HD antenna can usually beat the re-compressed version you get over cable.
And your house can catch fire and destroy your HDD, or you could have a head crash that takes out a bunch of data.
If your computer has information you don't want to lose, you have to back it up. You should always have three copies in two different physical locations of data you don't want to lose. If all three were SSD it's very unlikely all of the drives would fail at the same time.
I've had HDDs fail in the past where they then failed to be recognized by the BIOS. I might have been able to swap in a new controller, or spend several thousand dollars to have a data recovery service so an electron microscope on it. Or I just do what I did, put in a new drive and restore from the backup. Depending on being able to read data off a failed HDD is never a plan/solution.
I just bought a 250GB drive for $55 on Black Friday so expect this to happen by the end of next year.
Even with that pricing being common, I still think most store bought PCs will continue to using traditional HDDs. Self builds, sure go SSD, but manufactures will try to cut every corner so even if they are a penny cheaper HDDs will be around for a long time.
That SSD I bought is going into a new Laptop. While shopping the vast majority of them have come at with a sub 1080p display. My 2.5 year old smart phone has a 1080p, and there are new models have have 4K displays. So why are laptop using a bastard resolution of 1365x768 in 2015?
Read the article, IBM's solution also uses a credentials wallet.
SQRL uses QR codes so the user's wallet can be on a mobile device, and the user could log into a public machine without exposing a repeatable login method. SQRL also allows for a SQRL:// link on the QR code so a wallet program on the local machine, or the phone itself can still authenticate without using the QR code.
Where these differ is that SQRL is made to replace the username and password part of logging in. It also creates a unique identity for each site so the only way to map SQRL accounts between sites would be through information the user gives to the site such as an email address.
IBM's solution appears to have a 3rd party signer like a government create a certificate with identity information which is then used in the authentication process.
Japan was a cash based society, but that's currently changing.
Things are switching over to payments via a cell phone, if you went to Japan in the past few years I'd be extremely shocked that you didn't see people paying via mobile rather than cash.
The first editions of the PS3 had a CPU/GPU hardware, changed to a GPU hardware/Software PS2 compatibility, and finally removed all together.
Sony later started releasing "PS2 Classics" on their store. These are fully software based emulation and could be ran on any PS3 including the ones that had PS2 compatibility removed.
That seems quite unlikely, or at least the titles developed for the SNES-CD would have almost nothing in common with the later PS1 products due to the massive leap in hardware capabilities (e.g. 3D renditions on SNES hardware was... not great, even with SuperFX in the mix).
Not later games, but early games in the original PlayStation's life. The SNES-CD had it's own processor which would have provided some early 3D support.
I did know about SD2, I believe I also heard that the SNES version of Magic Knights Rayearth was also going to be a CD game that they then cut back.
I facepalmed at the mention of how Intel allegedly doesn't do this... does anybody remember HyperThreading?:-P
Intel's marketing for hyperthreading shows a quad, or hexa core processor that supports hyperthreading. So they advertise a four or six core processor that shows up as 8 or 12 cores in Windows.
AMD advertises an eight core bulldozer processor, but you only have four FPUs on the chip.
So Intel says you can run two threads on a single core, AMD says you have twice the number of FPUs so they aren't full cores.
The Sega-CD did have its own coprocessors that enabled more complex games.
I can't find sources, but I remember reading years ago that several prototype SNES-CD games were later made on the Playstation. For some reason Biohazard(Resident Evil) keeps springing to mind, but my Google-fu is failing to find any information as all I see are articles about this prototype hardware.
Sadly federal bullying of state financing says otherwise. When the federal IRS takes 20% or some of my income and my state takes 5%.
The federal government then says, state this is what is going to happen otherwise you won't get this federal funding, ie you need this legal drinking age or this speed limit or you won't get the federal funding for road repairs.
Ideally this should be the other way around where the state funds itself, though ironically this would screw over all the anti welfare southern red states that get far more federal funding than their citizen contribute to the federal government.
The HTC One M7 don't have a user accessible battery. It's hardwired to reboot the phone because otherwise a software glitch that crashes the phone could brick it until it ran out of power.
I used to have a Morphie power case for mine, but the power button on it was even more sensitive. My wife with the same setup didn't have issues with her purse. But even the loose extra side pockets of cargo shorts would allow it to get pressed.
My solution was figuring out that I didn't need the extra power from the case and switching to a $2 silicon case that makes the power button slightly recessed. I haven't had issues since.
It'd just be a thinner laptop. The LCD dictates the size of the device, then to have be protected the bottom with the keyboard needs to be the same size.
The Motorola Atrix already had this, but the software was much more limited that what can be pulled off with Continuum.
There is a setting that lets it instantly jump 30 seconds, or you can make it automatically fast forward. 30 seconds.
The sequence thing being mentioned is that the 30 second skip used to be locked out of the remote. But if you entered a series of key presses it would enable it.
It's not Intel or a stick, but PC Engine has a board that uses AMD's jaguar CPU, and had three Intel gigabit nice, mSata, supports SD booting, and had two mini pcie slots so you can add WiFi.
It's over kill for what your asking for, it's still small enough to be portable. At the board is under $150 http://www.pcengines.ch/apu2b4.htm
It's likely not beer sales, but the equipment and ingredients to make beer. I've only been brewing for two years, but I've noticed an large uptick of people in my local home brew store every time I'm there.
The HDMI spec does support having an Ethernet connection over the cable. If you had a receiver that you used an Ethernet connection on, it could share that connection with the TV without you realizing.
2007's main window still had the old style menu. But sub items like email, appointments, etc had the ribbon.
2010 was where the main interface was updated to using the ribbon.
When you register you get a single tail for all of your drone. The registration form isn't online yet, but I haven't heard anything about registering each one that have if you have multiples.
Regarding searching by the tail. Yes, you need the actual tail. But click back one page to the master search list. You have the ability to search by state and county. Every plane with their tail, and addresses of the owners is listed for that county. I wouldn't put it past the FAA to duplicating this exact search for the new list.
http://registry.faa.gov/aircraftinquiry/Aircraft_Inquiry.aspx
Except with it being public, someone could lookup your registration number via your name/address. They could then start flying it around an airport, the white house, or some other no fly zone with a drone that uses your number.
Suddenly you have the feds knocking on your door.
They still do this today. Cable companies even mess with the bitrates for different channels. An HD antenna can usually beat the re-compressed version you get over cable.
They tried that with me about two years ago.
My response? Sweet, what kind of speeds are you offering now?
We offer up to 20Mbps dow..
At that point I just quickly closed the door and walked away.
And your house can catch fire and destroy your HDD, or you could have a head crash that takes out a bunch of data.
If your computer has information you don't want to lose, you have to back it up. You should always have three copies in two different physical locations of data you don't want to lose. If all three were SSD it's very unlikely all of the drives would fail at the same time.
I've had HDDs fail in the past where they then failed to be recognized by the BIOS. I might have been able to swap in a new controller, or spend several thousand dollars to have a data recovery service so an electron microscope on it. Or I just do what I did, put in a new drive and restore from the backup. Depending on being able to read data off a failed HDD is never a plan/solution.
I just bought a 250GB drive for $55 on Black Friday so expect this to happen by the end of next year.
Even with that pricing being common, I still think most store bought PCs will continue to using traditional HDDs. Self builds, sure go SSD, but manufactures will try to cut every corner so even if they are a penny cheaper HDDs will be around for a long time.
That SSD I bought is going into a new Laptop. While shopping the vast majority of them have come at with a sub 1080p display. My 2.5 year old smart phone has a 1080p, and there are new models have have 4K displays. So why are laptop using a bastard resolution of 1365x768 in 2015?
Maybe they could move TSA agents over to this. They have plenty of practice from checking the general public.
Read the article, IBM's solution also uses a credentials wallet.
SQRL uses QR codes so the user's wallet can be on a mobile device, and the user could log into a public machine without exposing a repeatable login method. SQRL also allows for a SQRL:// link on the QR code so a wallet program on the local machine, or the phone itself can still authenticate without using the QR code.
Where these differ is that SQRL is made to replace the username and password part of logging in. It also creates a unique identity for each site so the only way to map SQRL accounts between sites would be through information the user gives to the site such as an email address.
IBM's solution appears to have a 3rd party signer like a government create a certificate with identity information which is then used in the authentication process.
Japan was a cash based society, but that's currently changing.
Things are switching over to payments via a cell phone, if you went to Japan in the past few years I'd be extremely shocked that you didn't see people paying via mobile rather than cash.
The first editions of the PS3 had a CPU/GPU hardware, changed to a GPU hardware/Software PS2 compatibility, and finally removed all together.
Sony later started releasing "PS2 Classics" on their store. These are fully software based emulation and could be ran on any PS3 including the ones that had PS2 compatibility removed.
That seems quite unlikely, or at least the titles developed for the SNES-CD would have almost nothing in common with the later PS1 products due to the massive leap in hardware capabilities (e.g. 3D renditions on SNES hardware was... not great, even with SuperFX in the mix).
Not later games, but early games in the original PlayStation's life. The SNES-CD had it's own processor which would have provided some early 3D support.
I did know about SD2, I believe I also heard that the SNES version of Magic Knights Rayearth was also going to be a CD game that they then cut back.
I facepalmed at the mention of how Intel allegedly doesn't do this... does anybody remember HyperThreading? :-P
Intel's marketing for hyperthreading shows a quad, or hexa core processor that supports hyperthreading. So they advertise a four or six core processor that shows up as 8 or 12 cores in Windows.
AMD advertises an eight core bulldozer processor, but you only have four FPUs on the chip.
So Intel says you can run two threads on a single core, AMD says you have twice the number of FPUs so they aren't full cores.
The Sega-CD did have its own coprocessors that enabled more complex games.
I can't find sources, but I remember reading years ago that several prototype SNES-CD games were later made on the Playstation. For some reason Biohazard(Resident Evil) keeps springing to mind, but my Google-fu is failing to find any information as all I see are articles about this prototype hardware.
If you uncheck it they might not track you. By default they track you, and you need to opt-out.
There are other tools like Disconnect that do the exact same thing that don't do any tracking. So why support a company with questionable motives.
They don't say specifically what they track, but they do sell "user data".
http://www.businessinsider.com/evidon-sells-ghostery-data-to-advertisers-2013-6
It sure does, it then tracks the sites you visit and they sell that data.
I've switched to Disconnect after reading up on Ghostery.
According to the ten amendment it doesn't.
Sadly federal bullying of state financing says otherwise. When the federal IRS takes 20% or some of my income and my state takes 5%.
The federal government then says, state this is what is going to happen otherwise you won't get this federal funding, ie you need this legal drinking age or this speed limit or you won't get the federal funding for road repairs.
Ideally this should be the other way around where the state funds itself, though ironically this would screw over all the anti welfare southern red states that get far more federal funding than their citizen contribute to the federal government.
The HTC One M7 don't have a user accessible battery. It's hardwired to reboot the phone because otherwise a software glitch that crashes the phone could brick it until it ran out of power.
I used to have a Morphie power case for mine, but the power button on it was even more sensitive. My wife with the same setup didn't have issues with her purse. But even the loose extra side pockets of cargo shorts would allow it to get pressed.
My solution was figuring out that I didn't need the extra power from the case and switching to a $2 silicon case that makes the power button slightly recessed. I haven't had issues since.
It wouldn't be start to tie in a new product with a TV show that's ending this week.
It'd just be a thinner laptop. The LCD dictates the size of the device, then to have be protected the bottom with the keyboard needs to be the same size.
The Motorola Atrix already had this, but the software was much more limited that what can be pulled off with Continuum.
http://www.amazon.com/AT-Laptop-Dock-Motorola-ATRIX/dp/B004M17D62
There is a setting that lets it instantly jump 30 seconds, or you can make it automatically fast forward. 30 seconds.
The sequence thing being mentioned is that the 30 second skip used to be locked out of the remote. But if you entered a series of key presses it would enable it.