I would probably take the extra time to do exactly the same thing I've been doing regarding my current reincarnation: ask myself why the hell do I keep prolonging my stay here...
If that site doesn't ring an alarm, them perhaps you should teach your children right-way to stay away from vans like this one as common-sense doesn't seem to be in your genes.
I'm also sure the PC as we know it will disappear or at least change radically, but probably not in the next 10 years. Their mainstream adoption, in the meantime, will probably fall back to the same proportion as people who had PC in the 90's; people who wanted PC because they wanted a PC, not because it became a common household item and a commodity.
Ultimately, I think the trend will go toward wearable computers and perhaps personal household servers when people realize the "cloud" is probably just that: vapor. You will probably end-up with some kind of G modem on your belt, a display/keyboard on your wrist and an earpiece, all connected to your home-server and/or cloud.
Ok, and that very unlighted comment comes from where? ETS has an excellent placement rate, I think over 95% so I have no worry for them. I studied there and had no trouble finding a job either.
I would have to agree on that one. For me, price is the major show-stopper as I would love nothing more than have my stuff in HD, however, there is no way in hell I'm going to pay 50-100% more just for that (considering I don't even have a surround sound system to benefit from that aspect). To me, HD should be 10-25% more at most, or just make it a fixed 5$ more:P.
Looking at the spec, I'm sure this PC isn't able to run all the current top games (unless you run at minimum resolution/settings at which point most games will look better on a 300$ PS3). The PC uses an ATI 5670 which was never, even at release date, considered a gaming card; even in XFire this thing would probably not deliver. Had the build included a 5770 and then added a 2nd one later on, the claim could hold some ground, but not this one.
Isn't that the case for almost everything? We have many "observed" universal behaviors, but did anyone really break the fundamental working to explain the universe? For instance, I think nobody has been able to explain gravity; I think they tried to explain it using a particle called graviton, but nothing was ever proven.
Moreover, many things were actually discovered before they could be explained. At one point, unless it can be dangerous (which could apply in this case), the fact that it simply works should be enough for most people.
I must admit it's hard to dismiss this SEC document that states that only ~43% of revenue comes from subscription. But even using those numbers it would mean that at least 30% of their revenue comes from misinformed customers:P
Degrees and ratios, the engineer in me is happy:D. How about "scrolling"? Is reading text horizontally more "efficient" and vertically? I think most of the written languages are written horizontally, but also know that some are vertical, could that also be a clue?
This is just a guess, but has anyone considered that the human vision might have been "horizontally optimized"? I mean our two eyes are placed so we have greater horizontal viewing angle so perhaps horizontal scrolling of the eye causes less of a "blur" effect than vertical scrolling. If so, it could mean that the vertical model was actually the flawed one (demotivator reference here). Just a though I would like to see proofs for or against.
Actually, I recall an article on Anandtech that states the various differences between the latest iPod Touch and iPhone. They didn't just drop the phone part, they also have a different casing which could indicates different internal structure, lower quality display, speaker, camera and no GPS. Are these worth the £270, probably not, but it means it might not be as bad as it looks.
Unfortunately, most people want feature over security. Many people don't even think about security for themselves and only complains when it bites them in the ass. "What do you mean I shouldn't write my PIN on my debit card? You should just have made your system more secure!"
Wow, who would have thought of that? Yes I do understand that security is an issue hard to cope with, but with that mentality we could also just stop progress because it might have risks...
I like the overall idea, but I think they could introduce some "Mythbuster"-type experimentation. First it helps understand the "Hypothesis-Methodology-Test-Conclusion" scientific approach and it also encourages them to be critical of pre-conceived ideas.
By "not an aggravating factor" I didn't mean it wasn't worst, I meant the "aggression" will be considered a separate offense and I think both must be considered independently since one cannot be punished twice for the same crime. I'm no lawyer so I might get this wrong.
The distinction between "armed robbery" and "aggravated robbery" is actually the lethality of the weapon so it could make sense.
I'm trying to see if there are any other examples/counter-examples that I can think of beside the "premeditated" argument that was already mentioned in the thread. I'm unable to find any so I guess creative use of common commodity cannot be punishable by law:P.
The assault was a bad example because is probably hurt more with a weapon, but how about robbery? Why is there an "armed robbery" or even "aggravated robbery"?
I just feel something should be done otherwise criminal life just keep getting better and better without much to counterbalance.
It's not the first time they are using the "Radeon" brand for non-GPU hardware; for over a year now they have RAM also.
Might want to check OMNet++ as well then, it's probably not as complete, but it's free and you can build your own modules.
I would probably take the extra time to do exactly the same thing I've been doing regarding my current reincarnation: ask myself why the hell do I keep prolonging my stay here ...
Salt is now good for both water AND data rentention YAY!
Companies don't force anyone, people's ego does ... big difference. Stop defining yourself by what you own, but by who you are and you should be fine :P
Can Dell/Apple survive in a mostly user-serviceable components future? They would probably do much worst that NewEgg in a (very doubtful) post-PC era.
If that site doesn't ring an alarm, them perhaps you should teach your children right-way to stay away from vans like this one as common-sense doesn't seem to be in your genes.
I'm also sure the PC as we know it will disappear or at least change radically, but probably not in the next 10 years. Their mainstream adoption, in the meantime, will probably fall back to the same proportion as people who had PC in the 90's; people who wanted PC because they wanted a PC, not because it became a common household item and a commodity.
Ultimately, I think the trend will go toward wearable computers and perhaps personal household servers when people realize the "cloud" is probably just that: vapor. You will probably end-up with some kind of G modem on your belt, a display/keyboard on your wrist and an earpiece, all connected to your home-server and/or cloud.
Ok, and that very unlighted comment comes from where? ETS has an excellent placement rate, I think over 95% so I have no worry for them. I studied there and had no trouble finding a job either.
I would have to agree on that one. For me, price is the major show-stopper as I would love nothing more than have my stuff in HD, however, there is no way in hell I'm going to pay 50-100% more just for that (considering I don't even have a surround sound system to benefit from that aspect). To me, HD should be 10-25% more at most, or just make it a fixed 5$ more :P.
Looking at the spec, I'm sure this PC isn't able to run all the current top games (unless you run at minimum resolution/settings at which point most games will look better on a 300$ PS3). The PC uses an ATI 5670 which was never, even at release date, considered a gaming card; even in XFire this thing would probably not deliver. Had the build included a 5770 and then added a 2nd one later on, the claim could hold some ground, but not this one.
Still it's a nice triple display setup.
Isn't that the case for almost everything? We have many "observed" universal behaviors, but did anyone really break the fundamental working to explain the universe? For instance, I think nobody has been able to explain gravity; I think they tried to explain it using a particle called graviton, but nothing was ever proven.
Moreover, many things were actually discovered before they could be explained. At one point, unless it can be dangerous (which could apply in this case), the fact that it simply works should be enough for most people.
I must admit it's hard to dismiss this SEC document that states that only ~43% of revenue comes from subscription. But even using those numbers it would mean that at least 30% of their revenue comes from misinformed customers :P
I think Wikileak should plead guilty and be willing to provide the man with proper equipment to make sure he can live peacefully from now on.
Degrees and ratios, the engineer in me is happy :D. How about "scrolling"? Is reading text horizontally more "efficient" and vertically? I think most of the written languages are written horizontally, but also know that some are vertical, could that also be a clue?
This is just a guess, but has anyone considered that the human vision might have been "horizontally optimized"? I mean our two eyes are placed so we have greater horizontal viewing angle so perhaps horizontal scrolling of the eye causes less of a "blur" effect than vertical scrolling. If so, it could mean that the vertical model was actually the flawed one (demotivator reference here). Just a though I would like to see proofs for or against.
Actually, I recall an article on Anandtech that states the various differences between the latest iPod Touch and iPhone. They didn't just drop the phone part, they also have a different casing which could indicates different internal structure, lower quality display, speaker, camera and no GPS. Are these worth the £270, probably not, but it means it might not be as bad as it looks.
I'm really disappointed guys, nobody made any references to Spaceball yet...
Unfortunately, most people want feature over security. Many people don't even think about security for themselves and only complains when it bites them in the ass. "What do you mean I shouldn't write my PIN on my debit card? You should just have made your system more secure!"
Wow, who would have thought of that? Yes I do understand that security is an issue hard to cope with, but with that mentality we could also just stop progress because it might have risks ...
I like the overall idea, but I think they could introduce some "Mythbuster"-type experimentation. First it helps understand the "Hypothesis-Methodology-Test-Conclusion" scientific approach and it also encourages them to be critical of pre-conceived ideas.
By "not an aggravating factor" I didn't mean it wasn't worst, I meant the "aggression" will be considered a separate offense and I think both must be considered independently since one cannot be punished twice for the same crime. I'm no lawyer so I might get this wrong.
The distinction between "armed robbery" and "aggravated robbery" is actually the lethality of the weapon so it could make sense.
:P.
I'm trying to see if there are any other examples/counter-examples that I can think of beside the "premeditated" argument that was already mentioned in the thread. I'm unable to find any so I guess creative use of common commodity cannot be punishable by law
But if the criminal actually injures the victim, it's another crime, not an "aggravating factor".
The assault was a bad example because is probably hurt more with a weapon, but how about robbery? Why is there an "armed robbery" or even "aggravated robbery"?
I just feel something should be done otherwise criminal life just keep getting better and better without much to counterbalance.