I edit my 35mm photos at 4680x3120, 48bit colour, which is 85MB, so 16 would take ~1.3GB, not including undo, alpha, layers, etc.
I'm hopeing to start scanning my 6x6 images soon, and they'll be about 7200x7200, or about 297MB each. I'll only want to edit one of them at a time. Even if I had several GB of RAM It'd be slow loading & storing it.
For me, 1600x1200 is a size I might scale a picture down to for display on a monitor, not a size I edit or print at (and I don't even have as high resolution of scanner as I could use with velvia or provia).
If you regularly edit several photos at a time (or do video editing), you can have a GB or two and still hit swap. Or if you use Linux it'll automagically pre-emptively write any inactive pages to swap incase it needs to free them (this is a good thing).
For labour relations and tax reasons some employers try to put employees on the books as consultants or contractors, but their financial auditors (it's not GAAP), revenue canada auditors (it may be tax evasion), and the labour relations board smack them down pretty fast.
(std disclaimer: IANAL, IANAA, if you need a lawyer or accountant, get a real one)
In five years time, I want people to still be able to get accounts of the Genoa Social Forum raid (July 22, 2001) and other events that are likely to turn out to be historical, but may be covered up in history books.
If you write your own drivers for Linux and one of the BSDs and release them under the GPL and BSDL with the complete documentation. From that point on the community can take care of maintaining and porting them if you don't (it's better if you do).
It's not enough to release your own closed-source driver for one architecture (like nvidia and ati do) because this locks out people on other architectures and later kernel versions.
And by "equally good" you mean HD based media players that can play music in non-DRM encumbered formats, right? I'd consider that better, not equally good.
I often google for technical information, and I find it's useful to put the relevant standards organization first ie "w3c CSS table-cell" otherwise ("CSS table-cell") you get oodles of hits to junk sites like w3schools.
Make sure your blog comment software adds rel="nofollow" to all user-submitted links that you've not approved. Then google (and probably others) will ignore the link.
8. Deliberate hostile action by a motorist against a motorcycle rider is a rare accident cause. The most frequent accident configuration is the motorcycle proceeding straight then the automobile makes a left turn in front of the oncoming motorcycle.
10. Intersections are the most likely place for the motorcycle accident, with the other vehicle violating the motorcycle right-of-way, and often violating traffic controls.
29. The typical motorcycle accident allows the motorcyclist just less than 2 seconds to complete all collision avoidance action.
So acceleration won't help, but the small frontal area of the fuel cell bike might be a visibility issue (from other parts of the report)
That's probably why they're BSD licensed. I prefer the GPL or LGPL for my personal projects, but then I don't work at google (or make many projects that would be of interest to anyone but me).
I was thinking about this for hybrids a while ago...
Typically I drive to & from work (well within the range of an electric-only), but some days I zip about town doing errands, or go out of town. Where I live, the electric grid is primarily powered by low-emissions sources (hydroelectric and a few heat/power co-generators). The electric grid is also MUCH lower cost per KWH than gasoline (due to taxes and the price of oil). Unfortunately, the prius and insight only charge from their built-in generator, which runs all the time.
I could easily run most days on just battery power if I could plug in at night. What I'd like is a hybrid with a 220V fast-charging (like 4 hours) plug and a short-trip/long-trip toggle on the dash. In short trip mode it would run off battery power until the computer decides to re-charge; in long trip mode it would start the generator right away, as the prius and insight do.
Re:Good LORD it's got some useless stuff!
on
KDE 3.4 Released
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· Score: 1
Amateur astronomers and photographers who work at night, among others.
According to the article, Linux might split into several "Languages". I'm beginning to suspact that this is a bad translation of a south-asian language news release.
It also applies to the Pentium MMX. MMX, 3dNOW!, SSE, SSE2, Altivec, etc. are all vector units of varying capabilities. The Cell processors are stream processors, not vector processing units (Although they include an AltiVec vector unit).
For those that don't know... it's a windows printer driver that makes PDFs of your document when you print to it... very handy.
I edit my 35mm photos at 4680x3120, 48bit colour, which is 85MB, so 16 would take ~1.3GB, not including undo, alpha, layers, etc.
I'm hopeing to start scanning my 6x6 images soon, and they'll be about 7200x7200, or about 297MB each. I'll only want to edit one of them at a time. Even if I had several GB of RAM It'd be slow loading & storing it.
For me, 1600x1200 is a size I might scale a picture down to for display on a monitor, not a size I edit or print at (and I don't even have as high resolution of scanner as I could use with velvia or provia).
Why not just get a 64 bit system (Opteron/POWER/whatever) and cram more RAM into it? It'd probably be way cheaper (due to mass production).
1337 people build systems while wearing polarfleece and standing in sockfeet on carpet, petting a cat, and still don't have static damage.
If you regularly edit several photos at a time (or do video editing), you can have a GB or two and still hit swap. Or if you use Linux it'll automagically pre-emptively write any inactive pages to swap incase it needs to free them (this is a good thing).
Around here (BC, Canada) an employee is one who
For labour relations and tax reasons some employers try to put employees on the books as consultants or contractors, but their financial auditors (it's not GAAP), revenue canada auditors (it may be tax evasion), and the labour relations board smack them down pretty fast.
(std disclaimer: IANAL, IANAA, if you need a lawyer or accountant, get a real one)
In five years time, I want people to still be able to get accounts of the Genoa Social Forum raid (July 22, 2001) and other events that are likely to turn out to be historical, but may be covered up in history books.
If you write your own drivers for Linux and one of the BSDs and release them under the GPL and BSDL with the complete documentation. From that point on the community can take care of maintaining and porting them if you don't (it's better if you do).
It's not enough to release your own closed-source driver for one architecture (like nvidia and ati do) because this locks out people on other architectures and later kernel versions.
so don't "nofollow" legitimate links from your own blog, just the ones in unreviewed user comments.
And by "equally good" you mean HD based media players that can play music in non-DRM encumbered formats, right? I'd consider that better, not equally good.
I often google for technical information, and I find it's useful to put the relevant standards organization first ie "w3c CSS table-cell" otherwise ("CSS table-cell") you get oodles of hits to junk sites like w3schools.
It also ranks mailing-list messages about certain software packages above the manual or official site for the package.
Make sure your blog comment software adds rel="nofollow" to all user-submitted links that you've not approved. Then google (and probably others) will ignore the link.
Louis Riel walks into a taxidermist and gets arrested. There was a mounted police officer inside.
From the hurt report
So acceleration won't help, but the small frontal area of the fuel cell bike might be a visibility issue (from other parts of the report)
here you go
That's probably why they're BSD licensed. I prefer the GPL or LGPL for my personal projects, but then I don't work at google (or make many projects that would be of interest to anyone but me).
I was thinking about this for hybrids a while ago...
Typically I drive to & from work (well within the range of an electric-only), but some days I zip about town doing errands, or go out of town. Where I live, the electric grid is primarily powered by low-emissions sources (hydroelectric and a few heat/power co-generators). The electric grid is also MUCH lower cost per KWH than gasoline (due to taxes and the price of oil). Unfortunately, the prius and insight only charge from their built-in generator, which runs all the time.
I could easily run most days on just battery power if I could plug in at night. What I'd like is a hybrid with a 220V fast-charging (like 4 hours) plug and a short-trip/long-trip toggle on the dash. In short trip mode it would run off battery power until the computer decides to re-charge; in long trip mode it would start the generator right away, as the prius and insight do.
Amateur astronomers and photographers who work at night, among others.
According to the article, Linux might split into several "Languages". I'm beginning to suspact that this is a bad translation of a south-asian language news release.
Worker-MPM and PerChild-MPM are off by default in Apache2. You have to go out of your way to use anything but Prefork-MPM (single threaded).
It seems the article was written by and for a moron. And still it's not read.
They want their Popular Science article back.
(This is not intended to flame the parent post... it's along the vein of "This is nothin new...")
It also applies to the Pentium MMX. MMX, 3dNOW!, SSE, SSE2, Altivec, etc. are all vector units of varying capabilities. The Cell processors are stream processors, not vector processing units (Although they include an AltiVec vector unit).