Which kinda shitty country is that? Nuclear power plant running costs are typically like 3-5% of the construction cost.
No solar plants also require maintenance. You need at least to clean the panels once or twice a year and that's if you are in place where it does not snow or rain a lot. Not even assuming inverter losses or other failures. Which do happen.
I use Ubuntu personally. But you know, Red Hat, like them or not, are the only ones interested in the "non-exciting" parts of the system. Like "unimportant" things like, you know, GCC, binutils, libc, systemd (blech), pulseaudio (blech), even little things like X11 core code getting the Linux kernel to actually compile and run properly on things other than Linus's computer...
Yes using the SQL command is the right approach. And no hash-tables are not the best solution. Please check your nearest book for the best case and WORST-CASE complexity of key insertion. kthx bye.
That's because the production lines are stopped and you would have to pay to restart them. This includes the suppliers as well. Another issue is that as the industry progressed in the 1970s designers moved on from 250 MW reactors to ever larger reactors to reach efficiencies in construction costs per Watt. Eventually we got to 1 GW reactors. However these reactors were then built in such low numbers that it became impossible to maintain their support infrastructure.
You have not read enough. Currently KNOWN uranium reserves are known to be able to last decades with current reactor technology. With integral fast reactors it would be centuries. That would be more time than what it took us to go from the industrial revolution to this day. By then we might have figured out something better to use.
You know another thing which spreads sulfur dioxide? Burning high sulfur diesel and non-scrubbed coal. There is just a little problem called acid rain.
You want basically to use something which will likely use a heap and result in an O(n log n) solution when the problem to remove duplicates, if the keys are small, is like O(k n).
Ah. Yet another person dissing bubble-sort. The venerable bubble-sort is quite efficient O(N) when sorting already sorted lists and it does not use any additional memory whatsoever. Try that with quick-sort or merge-sort.
Same reason why people play tic-tac-toe or checkers. It does not matter if someone else, be it a computer or not, can play better as long as you are having fun.
Same reason why people don't give up competing in the Olympics even if someone else has already had a better score.
The CPU manufacturers screwed it up by making buggy processors and, at least in the case of Intel, with little performance benefit over much older processors.
I wanted to game with higher detail on and to compile things faster. I also occasionally encode video or audio. That's why I bought the AMD Ryzen so I would have more concurrent threads to improve compilation. I might buy a new GPU card and larger SSD and put that Ryzen computer to use eventually. However it might be a bad idea because AMD is currently with a poor GPU lineup vs NVIDIA which likely means the prices won't be down as much as they should be at.
My old PC has an AMD Piledriver processor. It doesn't do SMT. It does CMP. So it isn't as vulnerable to those exploits as say Ryzen or an Intel processor. It is vulnerable to out-of-order branch prediction attacks though. But then again so is nearly everything else including ARM.
Ever heard of the Redstone Arsenal? At one point US government employees actually designed the systems although the work was often outsourced to contractors.
Which kinda shitty country is that? Nuclear power plant running costs are typically like 3-5% of the construction cost.
No solar plants also require maintenance. You need at least to clean the panels once or twice a year and that's if you are in place where it does not snow or rain a lot. Not even assuming inverter losses or other failures. Which do happen.
I use Ubuntu personally. But you know, Red Hat, like them or not, are the only ones interested in the "non-exciting" parts of the system. Like "unimportant" things like, you know, GCC, binutils, libc, systemd (blech), pulseaudio (blech), even little things like X11 core code getting the Linux kernel to actually compile and run properly on things other than Linus's computer...
Yes using the SQL command is the right approach. And no hash-tables are not the best solution. Please check your nearest book for the best case and WORST-CASE complexity of key insertion. kthx bye.
Highlander II levels of evil.
We won't. But we'll turn the world into a giant desert. That's what typically happens when CO2 levels are low. Plants, like, eat the stuff.
s/support/manufacture/
That's because the production lines are stopped and you would have to pay to restart them. This includes the suppliers as well. Another issue is that as the industry progressed in the 1970s designers moved on from 250 MW reactors to ever larger reactors to reach efficiencies in construction costs per Watt. Eventually we got to 1 GW reactors. However these reactors were then built in such low numbers that it became impossible to maintain their support infrastructure.
You clearly have not read a lot about nuclear power. Reactor running costs are a tiny fraction of the construction costs.
You have not read enough. Currently KNOWN uranium reserves are known to be able to last decades with current reactor technology. With integral fast reactors it would be centuries. That would be more time than what it took us to go from the industrial revolution to this day. By then we might have figured out something better to use.
You know another thing which spreads sulfur dioxide? Burning high sulfur diesel and non-scrubbed coal. There is just a little problem called acid rain.
I think I read the plot in this story in the "Fallen Angels" book by Larry Niven.
As if it wasn't enough for Red Hat to impose systemd on us they just got bought out by IBM. I fear, my friend, that Linux is DOOMED.
Yeah no shit. I mean committed to a 40- 50- hour workweek but it isn't a full-time job? What would you know.
You want basically to use something which will likely use a heap and result in an O(n log n) solution when the problem to remove duplicates, if the keys are small, is like O(k n).
Ah. Yet another person dissing bubble-sort. The venerable bubble-sort is quite efficient O(N) when sorting already sorted lists and it does not use any additional memory whatsoever. Try that with quick-sort or merge-sort.
That is just a repetition of that axiom that "behind every great fortune is a crime" of some sort.
Then remember to put a cycling video showing yourself "working" as the input to the webcam et voila.
Just install their crapware on a VM.
It has already happened. Meet Satya Nadella and Sundar Pichai.
Same reason why people play tic-tac-toe or checkers. It does not matter if someone else, be it a computer or not, can play better as long as you are having fun.
Same reason why people don't give up competing in the Olympics even if someone else has already had a better score.
If you think that is bad you have to read about India's e-currency initiatives under Modi as President. 1984 here we come.
Other people agree that GPUs are still overpriced like heck.
https://www.eetimes.com/docume...
The CPU manufacturers screwed it up by making buggy processors and, at least in the case of Intel, with little performance benefit over much older processors.
I wanted to game with higher detail on and to compile things faster. I also occasionally encode video or audio. That's why I bought the AMD Ryzen so I would have more concurrent threads to improve compilation. I might buy a new GPU card and larger SSD and put that Ryzen computer to use eventually. However it might be a bad idea because AMD is currently with a poor GPU lineup vs NVIDIA which likely means the prices won't be down as much as they should be at.
My old PC has an AMD Piledriver processor. It doesn't do SMT. It does CMP. So it isn't as vulnerable to those exploits as say Ryzen or an Intel processor. It is vulnerable to out-of-order branch prediction attacks though. But then again so is nearly everything else including ARM.
Ever heard of the Redstone Arsenal? At one point US government employees actually designed the systems although the work was often outsourced to contractors.