Why would you make that up? The email from Kraken specifically states fiat or crypto.
"If so, let us know and weâ(TM)ll pass your tips on to law enforcement. Kraken is giving up to $100,000 USD (fiat or crypto) as a reward for the tip(s) that best lead to the discovery of the missing $190 million US dollars. "
If you want Calculon to race to the laser gun battle in his hover-Ferarri, press 1. If you want Calculon to double-check his paperwork, press 2. Enter now.
Confused, Fry presses "1" on his chair.
Mr. Moviefone: You have pressed 2.
Fry: No, I didn't!
Mr. Moviefone: I'm almost positive you did.
I second this I dual boot a fairly modern i7 8th gen Asus laptop and as long as the activities are usually similar (ie mostly using the integrated graphics vs the discreet) I find runtimes very close and usually Linux(4.19 kern Manjaro) seems to edge out Windows.
I'd agree but Federalism is already messed up as the feds just take money from states like mine in the NE and give it to states in the south so if anything this is at-least more fair than that as its at-least based on something then certain regions supporting others with little reasoning. This would actually go where the product does. I'm not saying my idea is perfect but it will probably be better than what the government comes up with. I'd prefer the SC had decided that it was like it was in the old days. I.e. no point of presence in the logicality then no responsibility to collect.
That would work too but I don't see those greedy bastards going that way. At least with my solution it would be simple and have a very low compliance cost to businesses.
If they want to charge tax on the internet. Then just come up with a single standard tax across all 50 states(say 2%). Having to figure out 2000+ sets of complicated rules is just crazy. Make it payable to the states so no one has to figure out any local tax BS.
I suspect they automate the advertising almost 100% and they don't want to accidentally put an ad from a company with something they feel objectionable about. Its probably easier(more profitable) to just ban or demonitize anything that more than say 40-50% of their ad customers may take issue with. I'm not saying its right but that it was likely a financial decision.
They technically do peer but it peers mostly locally in the ISP's core so it doesn't go over what we normally call "peering links". Even my smaller ISP here has a netflix CDN cluster here that takes about 90% of the traffic and serves it locally right from the ISP's regional DC. The rub is the ISP gives these boxes free power/space and access to peer to them in exchange for cutting the netflix traffic flowing out the peering links. In this case the only traffic that actually goes out is the replication traffic for the cluster, some small # of titles that aren't on the cluster and DRM traffic for playback.
How do you figure? The bar is presumably private property and there is no law that I'm aware of that prevents anyone from shielding their property from RF. In some cases some building design can do this anyways. I've been in large buildings with metallized windows that effectively did something similar. I honestly can't think of any laws this would break.
Thats strange I've been affected by breaches in the past and have had new cards issued by two different banks. On both they did something where they deny all new transactions to the old cc # but allow all of my prescheduled transfers to still go through. In every case the CC company denied the charges instead of letting them go through in the first place so I've never actually had to dispute. Their automatic guess as whether or not a transaction is pretty accurate and generally they send a text that I can reply to authorize a transaction that their system flags as suspicious(but this is so rare I think it's happened two times in 3-4 years).
14nm yields are at about where 22mm yields were at the same point in the release cycle. There were some early issues but as of
1H'16 the curves match up with the 22mm yield.
Seems like the solution would be to allow users to wipe the manufacturer key and install their own. Although they probably don't want to do this with all their signed bootloaders and code.
This must have a locked bootloader or such to prevent the software from being changed out. I personally hate these locked loader devices but at least Amazon is paying you here. Samsung locks their crappy telco provided image on their devices in the US and doesn't even give you a discount.
Makes sense. The only reason I thought PIV would be easier is it's a US government standard in use at most or all federal agencies and works on Linux/Mac/Windows out of the box. Very likely the IRS agents and staff use PIV cards to authenticate to IRS systems and obtain physical access to IRS buildings.
Why can't I just submit the public key from one of my PIV tokens(say with a copy of my passport or some other ID and maybe a notarization) and use that to sign stuff I want to submit to the IRS? That seems like a simple solution.
I don't know I lived in New England my entire life and I've never had any of the troubles you mention on snow and ice. With all wheel drive, modern snow tires, keeping you speed somewhat reasonable and engine breaking its pretty hard to slide off the road or not make it up a hill.
If your going to insult someone at least get your facts straight. The Second Amendment (1791) protects the right of individuals to keep and bear arms . The Supreme Court has ruled that this right applies to individuals, not merely to collective militias
If you care about power per port you don't use the cat6 version you use the SFP one with twinax or 10GBaseSR. Cat6 is good because you can use your existing cable plant but you get increased latency and power use.
Why would you make that up? The email from Kraken specifically states fiat or crypto. "If so, let us know and weâ(TM)ll pass your tips on to law enforcement. Kraken is giving up to $100,000 USD (fiat or crypto) as a reward for the tip(s) that best lead to the discovery of the missing $190 million US dollars. "
Sign the code with a private key and compare a hash. Secure devices have been doing this for some time.
If you want Calculon to race to the laser gun battle in his hover-Ferarri, press 1. If you want Calculon to double-check his paperwork, press 2. Enter now. Confused, Fry presses "1" on his chair. Mr. Moviefone: You have pressed 2. Fry: No, I didn't! Mr. Moviefone: I'm almost positive you did.
I second this I dual boot a fairly modern i7 8th gen Asus laptop and as long as the activities are usually similar (ie mostly using the integrated graphics vs the discreet) I find runtimes very close and usually Linux(4.19 kern Manjaro) seems to edge out Windows.
I'd agree but Federalism is already messed up as the feds just take money from states like mine in the NE and give it to states in the south so if anything this is at-least more fair than that as its at-least based on something then certain regions supporting others with little reasoning. This would actually go where the product does. I'm not saying my idea is perfect but it will probably be better than what the government comes up with. I'd prefer the SC had decided that it was like it was in the old days. I.e. no point of presence in the logicality then no responsibility to collect.
That would work too but I don't see those greedy bastards going that way. At least with my solution it would be simple and have a very low compliance cost to businesses.
If they want to charge tax on the internet. Then just come up with a single standard tax across all 50 states(say 2%). Having to figure out 2000+ sets of complicated rules is just crazy. Make it payable to the states so no one has to figure out any local tax BS.
A pair of 100G-LR QSFP's can be had for about 2k-4k now. Its been a long time since they were near the prices you are quoting.
Because its used for cooling most likely so they are swapping warm water for colder water.
I suspect they automate the advertising almost 100% and they don't want to accidentally put an ad from a company with something they feel objectionable about. Its probably easier(more profitable) to just ban or demonitize anything that more than say 40-50% of their ad customers may take issue with. I'm not saying its right but that it was likely a financial decision.
Thats been pretty standard in networking for years. Dropping any 0's. Like 10/8 or 8.8/16. Its just a shorthand.
They technically do peer but it peers mostly locally in the ISP's core so it doesn't go over what we normally call "peering links". Even my smaller ISP here has a netflix CDN cluster here that takes about 90% of the traffic and serves it locally right from the ISP's regional DC. The rub is the ISP gives these boxes free power/space and access to peer to them in exchange for cutting the netflix traffic flowing out the peering links. In this case the only traffic that actually goes out is the replication traffic for the cluster, some small # of titles that aren't on the cluster and DRM traffic for playback.
They don't even need anything that advanced. A very old soviet system shot down a US stealth aircraft in 1999. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
How do you figure? The bar is presumably private property and there is no law that I'm aware of that prevents anyone from shielding their property from RF. In some cases some building design can do this anyways. I've been in large buildings with metallized windows that effectively did something similar. I honestly can't think of any laws this would break.
Almost all the content is served off their own CDN running BSD. They have a fairly significant investment in the CDN.
Thats strange I've been affected by breaches in the past and have had new cards issued by two different banks. On both they did something where they deny all new transactions to the old cc # but allow all of my prescheduled transfers to still go through. In every case the CC company denied the charges instead of letting them go through in the first place so I've never actually had to dispute. Their automatic guess as whether or not a transaction is pretty accurate and generally they send a text that I can reply to authorize a transaction that their system flags as suspicious(but this is so rare I think it's happened two times in 3-4 years).
14nm yields are at about where 22mm yields were at the same point in the release cycle. There were some early issues but as of 1H'16 the curves match up with the 22mm yield.
Seems like the solution would be to allow users to wipe the manufacturer key and install their own. Although they probably don't want to do this with all their signed bootloaders and code.
This must have a locked bootloader or such to prevent the software from being changed out. I personally hate these locked loader devices but at least Amazon is paying you here. Samsung locks their crappy telco provided image on their devices in the US and doesn't even give you a discount.
Makes sense. The only reason I thought PIV would be easier is it's a US government standard in use at most or all federal agencies and works on Linux/Mac/Windows out of the box. Very likely the IRS agents and staff use PIV cards to authenticate to IRS systems and obtain physical access to IRS buildings.
Why can't I just submit the public key from one of my PIV tokens(say with a copy of my passport or some other ID and maybe a notarization) and use that to sign stuff I want to submit to the IRS? That seems like a simple solution.
I don't know I lived in New England my entire life and I've never had any of the troubles you mention on snow and ice. With all wheel drive, modern snow tires, keeping you speed somewhat reasonable and engine breaking its pretty hard to slide off the road or not make it up a hill.
If your going to insult someone at least get your facts straight. The Second Amendment (1791) protects the right of individuals to keep and bear arms . The Supreme Court has ruled that this right applies to individuals, not merely to collective militias
If you care about power per port you don't use the cat6 version you use the SFP one with twinax or 10GBaseSR. Cat6 is good because you can use your existing cable plant but you get increased latency and power use.
Newer ones might not but older selectable yield weapons most definitely had dials. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...