Why? Whether they do or not is irrelevant. They want to show their products in the best light. The best light is not always realistic. Better to have multiple tests with differing conditions.
No, but what it does do is give an absolute worst case scenario that intelligent, knowledgeable people (the ones buying 'pro' models of products) can use to intuit what they might expect for their own usage. It's just as valid a metric as 'typical LCD use case.' They measure different things for different people.
He watched the speeches himself instead of just taking the media's word and you're discounting him already? Now that's some sound judgement right there.
The likelihood of future patches on their current operating systems suggest they're not secure either. SOP should be to assume your system is vulnerable at all times.
This obsession of consuming desktop real estate with gobs of oversized buttons/fonts, widgets, and full screen 'menus' needs to stop.
How is it 'cleaner and more consistent' to have various widgets of multiple sizes? Compare that to menus and toolbars, where all the options are the same size, making them intuitively selectible and have hotkeys associated with them. Both menus and toolbars are typically grouped by related functions, so the ribbon offers nothing new there. The oft-cited 'feature hunt' justification persists across both designs, so the ribbon is no better there either and its inconsistent layout makes it more difficult. Unlike menus, sometimes ribbons stay down even when unpinned, adding to the annoyance. Then there's the stupidity of that fullscreen file menu in office 2013/16 and the slow/laggy interface they've grafted onto it.
1. bothered to write secure code or 2. just stopped adding pointless overengineered functionality that reduces reliability, security, and privacy. There's no need for my fridge and toaster to have ip addresses.
Expecting humans to work 8-12hr shifts without meal/bathroom breaks is pretty harsh and also counterproductive to business.. That's how accidents happen and they cost more than the meal breaks do.
Honestly, I'm surprised that apple got away with this. I believe every state has such laws.
"invoke fear into the class members that if they so much as discuss the various labor policies, they run the risk of being fired, sued or disciplined."
Use of the phrase 'class member' is interesting as no typical employee would use such phrases. It sounds more like these people were told what to say. TFS only attributes it to 'store employees', but it reads like propaganda.
What's funnier is how the left is all about liberalism until they're not. Suddenly it's only ok to say what they want you to say and have the opinions they want you to have. Anything else is a crime against humanity.
Really? So, if the cake baker doesn't want to write "Happy wedding day, John and Jake" because he's anti gay marriage, that's a-ok with you? Somehow I doubt it.
That doesn't mean they should be immune to criticism for placing their own spin on things, calling it 'fake news'. Don't like it? Well, there's nothing wrong with making sure your voice is heard! Demagoguery in any form should be criticized. How is this such a bad thing? There's always the NYT and MSNBC!
Directsound was killed off in windows vista. Openal was supposed to replace it but that's pretty much a dead stick too, though some engines still support it. The current standard in windows, xbox, and phone is xaudio2 which does support multichannel with a low latency software mixer. However, there is no hardware acceleration for it. Some titles do their own mixing and dsp in-game with libraries like FMOD and just push the output to xaudio. Titles typically expose multiple speaker modes so adding multichannel isn't that big of a deal.
It's no problem because Americans are becoming increasingly comfortable with cherry picking their preferred "information" and discarding the rest, and critical thinking is considered "unPC" and thus shunned.
No, you just lack reading comprehension skills.
Every OS today is full of holes. I suggest you plan accordingly when using them.
Finding your destination?
Why? Whether they do or not is irrelevant. They want to show their products in the best light. The best light is not always realistic. Better to have multiple tests with differing conditions.
No, but what it does do is give an absolute worst case scenario that intelligent, knowledgeable people (the ones buying 'pro' models of products) can use to intuit what they might expect for their own usage. It's just as valid a metric as 'typical LCD use case.' They measure different things for different people.
He watched the speeches himself instead of just taking the media's word and you're discounting him already? Now that's some sound judgement right there.
not a bad analogy..
huhuhuh.. the traveling dingleberries.. huhuhuhuh
It was.. it's basically win2k with that ugly ass luna skin which made it look like a tacky fisher price toy, hence the rep.
The likelihood of future patches on their current operating systems suggest they're not secure either. SOP should be to assume your system is vulnerable at all times.
That absolutely kills performance though..
With NSLs it doesn't matter whether they're public, private, free, or paid. The problem is the politicians who are passing abusive laws.
This obsession of consuming desktop real estate with gobs of oversized buttons/fonts, widgets, and full screen 'menus' needs to stop.
How is it 'cleaner and more consistent' to have various widgets of multiple sizes? Compare that to menus and toolbars, where all the options are the same size, making them intuitively selectible and have hotkeys associated with them. Both menus and toolbars are typically grouped by related functions, so the ribbon offers nothing new there. The oft-cited 'feature hunt' justification persists across both designs, so the ribbon is no better there either and its inconsistent layout makes it more difficult. Unlike menus, sometimes ribbons stay down even when unpinned, adding to the annoyance. Then there's the stupidity of that fullscreen file menu in office 2013/16 and the slow/laggy interface they've grafted onto it.
What isn't annoying about computer operating systems these days?
Actually, china has lots of regs.. more than the US.. so why is it still a shithole?
or, what if manufacturers:
1. bothered to write secure code
or
2. just stopped adding pointless overengineered functionality that reduces reliability, security, and privacy. There's no need for my fridge and toaster to have ip addresses.
Then updates wouldn't be so critical.
I have a better idea: how about having no 'smart' functionality that requires updating? No security issues whatsoever.
Take the C code of the original freeciv and port it to activex.. haha
Expecting humans to work 8-12hr shifts without meal/bathroom breaks is pretty harsh and also counterproductive to business.. That's how accidents happen and they cost more than the meal breaks do.
Honestly, I'm surprised that apple got away with this. I believe every state has such laws.
"invoke fear into the class members that if they so much as discuss the various labor policies, they run the risk of being fired, sued or disciplined."
Use of the phrase 'class member' is interesting as no typical employee would use such phrases. It sounds more like these people were told what to say. TFS only attributes it to 'store employees', but it reads like propaganda.
roads are triggering.. roads cause ptsd.. roads need trigger warnings.
What's funnier is how the left is all about liberalism until they're not. Suddenly it's only ok to say what they want you to say and have the opinions they want you to have. Anything else is a crime against humanity.
Really? So, if the cake baker doesn't want to write "Happy wedding day, John and Jake" because he's anti gay marriage, that's a-ok with you? Somehow I doubt it.
That doesn't mean they should be immune to criticism for placing their own spin on things, calling it 'fake news'. Don't like it? Well, there's nothing wrong with making sure your voice is heard! Demagoguery in any form should be criticized. How is this such a bad thing? There's always the NYT and MSNBC!
Directsound was killed off in windows vista. Openal was supposed to replace it but that's pretty much a dead stick too, though some engines still support it. The current standard in windows, xbox, and phone is xaudio2 which does support multichannel with a low latency software mixer. However, there is no hardware acceleration for it. Some titles do their own mixing and dsp in-game with libraries like FMOD and just push the output to xaudio. Titles typically expose multiple speaker modes so adding multichannel isn't that big of a deal.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
http://www.fmod.org/
A government that believes in, upholds, and understands the constitution.. A 180 from what we have atm.
It's no problem because Americans are becoming increasingly comfortable with cherry picking their preferred "information" and discarding the rest, and critical thinking is considered "unPC" and thus shunned.
FTFY
It was likely left there on purpose.