1) Yes, if it saves me (the driver) 2) Yes, if it saves me (the driver)
I can guarantee you that any human driver will put their live above all else when faced with a split second decision like this. Of course, being human drivers, they might think that decision involves swerving or slamming on the brakes or driving off a cliff and die in the process, but that doesn't change the fact that they wanted to save themselves.
Encryption will rewrite all the data, and a 1 TB drive can only hold 1 copy of 1 TB of data. It is not a metadata change only when ransomware encrypts your data.
While the encryption is happening, Windows will delete more and more snapshots to recover space, until only 1 is left.
Forcing less regulation on the internet would be more restrictive to the ISP's (they can't throttle selectively), less restrictive for consumers. Forcing more regulation on the internet would be less restrictive to ISP's, more restrictive for consumers (consumers pay extra for specific services).
It's simply because there are less women working at the highest levels in these fields, which has as an underlying cause that women, in general, are less inclined to put in what it takes to lead such research teams (ie. putting work before family, foregoing socializing, personal hygiene, etc).
Less women willing to make such sacrifices (or only part-time) means they're competing with more men willing to do so, which naturally leads to men being over represented and thus having increased chances of winning prestigious merit based prices.
But we can just call all that sexism and pretend that men and women are exactly equal and that millions of years of evolution couldn't possibly have had an impact on how men and women mentally develop, and how that might effect their careers.
Yes, put Win10 behind a firewall + proxy. Then only give the applications that need internet access the address/pw of the proxy and donot set the proxy of Windows itself. For Chrome you'll need FoxyProxy to set one without using the system settings.
You may also need software like Proxifier to have other application go through your proxy.
Net effect: Nothing has internet unless you allow it, resulting in a much more relaxing experience (apps donot download updates, and generally just donot do stuff behind your back without your knowledge). Windows cannot updates its tiles, nor download software, nor update itself. It's quite peaceful.
1) There are energy sources that donot produce net carbon 2) Depends on how much carbon you sequester 3) Giving you half a dozen options, solar, wind, nuclear, hydro, geothermal 4) That should become standard business practice, all production should be environmentally neutral, and if it is not, the buyer has to compensate for it instead, which could be in the form of a tax.
Current website design trend though is to put all necessary information in the URL to recover the current state of the page you were viewing. For example, a flight reservation system would encode the flight you were looking at, how many tickets you wanted and any special options that you selected -- basically, any interaction you did with the website up to that point is recorded in the URL, so it's exact state might be restored when you continue browsing an hour later or when your request goes to a different server.
Sometimes URL's are too short for the amount of information that needs to be encoded in them. For example, a website that offers translation of a piece of text would need to store the text in the URL in order for it to be stateless, however that may not be possible if the text is too long.
The Google map URL I saw earlier, doesn't only encode what part of the map you were looking for (like the address), but, in order to give you the same results even if the request went to a different server, also probably encodes the map scroll position and zoom size that you are using so it can be restored exactly.
If this information cannot be put in URL, then it's back to sessions (using a cookie or unreadable id) and timeouts when sessions expire -- plus a centralized infrastructure for such sessions (which isn't needed for stateless url's).
Atleast limit it to something reasonable, like 1% of your max speed, 10 Mbps/10 Mpbs, otherwise it will never hold up. Oh wait, 64 kbps probably is 1% of your max speed in America, where I hear just having 1 ISP option is considered competitive...
There's a good chance that there actually is no solution because we're already past the tipping point or will pass it in a few years.
Pretty sure this is why we don't see any other civilizations in the galaxy as well. They destroy their origin world before being capable of spreading elsewhere.
That may happen. It however doesn't happen on a human time scale. Earth measures its birthdays per million years. So yeah, sure, in a million years we'll slide into an ice age. I'm glad that's a comforting thought to you.
When you hit a wall at 1 mile per hour, it hurts a bit, but you'll recover. Hit it at 1000 miles per hour and you're dead. This is exactly what's going on now. The rate of change is so ridiculous that I also think that we're past the point of no return.
For instance: Asmetric is hard and demands performance, thus is only used to do a preceeding exchange of a symetric key before the show starts. That's why https handshakes take up 1.5 of the 3.5 second rule for loading and displaying websites
This has absolutely nothing to do with the performance of the assymetric encryption, but everything to do with the two extra roundtrips it takes for the HTTPS handshake.
And no, I don't have and never will have a CS degree -- I only have a solid interest in how stuff works (tm), which has led me to expand my knowledge in all kinds of areas.
Yes, I'm sure technology will be able to keep up with exponential growth forever.
Just maybe, we are starting to see the limits of this thinking, but I guess for people like you it must be glaringly, undeniable, planet-burning obvious before we can be justified to put the environment before the economy.
...and then what? He'd go broke or something?
This is slashdot, kilo changes to 1024 when you add "byte" behind it.
1) Yes, if it saves me (the driver)
2) Yes, if it saves me (the driver)
I can guarantee you that any human driver will put their live above all else when faced with a split second decision like this. Of course, being human drivers, they might think that decision involves swerving or slamming on the brakes or driving off a cliff and die in the process, but that doesn't change the fact that they wanted to save themselves.
Definitely the best solution, saves the most lives in the long run.
There's OpenJDK. We've been running enterprise stuff on it since 2014, you don't need Oracle.
... ah yes, and when that happens you can just use the SD card slot... oh wait, you can't.
And this is completely wrong.
Encryption will rewrite all the data, and a 1 TB drive can only hold 1 copy of 1 TB of data. It is not a metadata change only when ransomware encrypts your data.
While the encryption is happening, Windows will delete more and more snapshots to recover space, until only 1 is left.
It's a matter of perspective.
Forcing less regulation on the internet would be more restrictive to the ISP's (they can't throttle selectively), less restrictive for consumers. Forcing more regulation on the internet would be less restrictive to ISP's, more restrictive for consumers (consumers pay extra for specific services).
It's simply because there are less women working at the highest levels in these fields, which has as an underlying cause that women, in general, are less inclined to put in what it takes to lead such research teams (ie. putting work before family, foregoing socializing, personal hygiene, etc).
Less women willing to make such sacrifices (or only part-time) means they're competing with more men willing to do so, which naturally leads to men being over represented and thus having increased chances of winning prestigious merit based prices.
But we can just call all that sexism and pretend that men and women are exactly equal and that millions of years of evolution couldn't possibly have had an impact on how men and women mentally develop, and how that might effect their careers.
Yes, put Win10 behind a firewall + proxy. Then only give the applications that need internet access the address/pw of the proxy and donot set the proxy of Windows itself. For Chrome you'll need FoxyProxy to set one without using the system settings.
You may also need software like Proxifier to have other application go through your proxy.
Net effect: Nothing has internet unless you allow it, resulting in a much more relaxing experience (apps donot download updates, and generally just donot do stuff behind your back without your knowledge). Windows cannot updates its tiles, nor download software, nor update itself. It's quite peaceful.
Good idea, people drive better when in a hurry...
Easy, they check the special copyright bit that is magically set on every byte you transmit.
Good. Fuck off with those drones.
1) There are energy sources that donot produce net carbon
2) Depends on how much carbon you sequester
3) Giving you half a dozen options, solar, wind, nuclear, hydro, geothermal
4) That should become standard business practice, all production should be environmentally neutral, and if it is not, the buyer has to compensate for it instead, which could be in the form of a tax.
That just makes code less readable.
Experts donot make that mistake. In fact, the question makes your look rather dumb.
Current website design trend though is to put all necessary information in the URL to recover the current state of the page you were viewing. For example, a flight reservation system would encode the flight you were looking at, how many tickets you wanted and any special options that you selected -- basically, any interaction you did with the website up to that point is recorded in the URL, so it's exact state might be restored when you continue browsing an hour later or when your request goes to a different server.
Sometimes URL's are too short for the amount of information that needs to be encoded in them. For example, a website that offers translation of a piece of text would need to store the text in the URL in order for it to be stateless, however that may not be possible if the text is too long.
The Google map URL I saw earlier, doesn't only encode what part of the map you were looking for (like the address), but, in order to give you the same results even if the request went to a different server, also probably encodes the map scroll position and zoom size that you are using so it can be restored exactly.
If this information cannot be put in URL, then it's back to sessions (using a cookie or unreadable id) and timeouts when sessions expire -- plus a centralized infrastructure for such sessions (which isn't needed for stateless url's).
Atleast limit it to something reasonable, like 1% of your max speed, 10 Mbps/10 Mpbs, otherwise it will never hold up. Oh wait, 64 kbps probably is 1% of your max speed in America, where I hear just having 1 ISP option is considered competitive...
There's a good chance that there actually is no solution because we're already past the tipping point or will pass it in a few years.
Pretty sure this is why we don't see any other civilizations in the galaxy as well. They destroy their origin world before being capable of spreading elsewhere.
That may happen. It however doesn't happen on a human time scale. Earth measures its birthdays per million years. So yeah, sure, in a million years we'll slide into an ice age. I'm glad that's a comforting thought to you.
I dare say we cannot do this "right now", we don't have the technology for it, nor the capacity to launch such a project.
Stupidity knows no bounds.
When you hit a wall at 1 mile per hour, it hurts a bit, but you'll recover. Hit it at 1000 miles per hour and you're dead. This is exactly what's going on now. The rate of change is so ridiculous that I also think that we're past the point of no return.
This has absolutely nothing to do with the performance of the assymetric encryption, but everything to do with the two extra roundtrips it takes for the HTTPS handshake.
And no, I don't have and never will have a CS degree -- I only have a solid interest in how stuff works (tm), which has led me to expand my knowledge in all kinds of areas.
To learn something well, you only need a genuine interest and curiosity on the subject.
Yes, I'm sure technology will be able to keep up with exponential growth forever.
Just maybe, we are starting to see the limits of this thinking, but I guess for people like you it must be glaringly, undeniable, planet-burning obvious before we can be justified to put the environment before the economy.