The limit of 1/x as x approaches zero does not exist (unless, of course, you are using a single unsigned infinity), since if you approach it from the left it approaches negative infinity and if you approach it from the right it approaches positive infinity.
Macromedia published specifications for Flash starting with Flash 6 and Adobe continues to do so. The Flash 8 specification is available here. Admittedly it is only free as in beer, comes with usage restrictions and does not fully describe the main video codec (Sorenson Spark, a variation on H.263; though Flash 8 introduces a new one), but it's better than nothing.
Actually, 30 million cubic kilometres is 30 × 10^15, or 30 quadrillion (short scale) cubic metres. Divide that by the oceanic surface area of 361 million square kilometres and we get 83 metres. (But the world is not flat and gravitation is not uniform, so, eh.)
I do believe that the present Emperor of Japan had visited a Korean shrine on the island of Saipan in June 2005, but otherwise, apologies from the emperors seem sparse. News reports: [1][2]
Not quite the article, but perhaps North Korea itself is using this as a FUD tool. I saw it yesterday on NHK news, so it should be an official statement from South Korea...
"The Google(TM) Code Jam 2004 is being offered by Google Inc. ("Google") and TopCoder, Inc. ("TopCoder"). Google is using the results of the Code Jam 2004 to identify possible employees for their company."
That's the first two lines of the Terms & Conditions.
We will now wait for 16,777,216 (2^24) in accordance to the old maxim, "the computer scientist says that there are 1,024 metres in a kilometre, and the scientist says that there are 1,000 bytes in a kilobyte."
What would you do with 7.2057594 × 10^16 (72 quintillion) addresses?
It's too bad that one mole of hydrogen gas (a measly 2g of hydrogen gas, approx. 24 litres at s.t.p.) has approx 8,357,400.87 times more molecules than you have IPv6 addresses in a Class A block.
Interesting factoid: There are roughly enough IPv6 addresses (assuming all the 2^64 addresses are used) to address one 2^-15 of a mole...
I wonder how long before we reach one Googol addresses (~2**333). And after that, realise that variable-length addresses are most forward compatible.
It's highly unlikely that you will find one. I speak as a Malaysian.
Their sales come from corporate and other large-scale users, like my school and my father's offices. My school paid over RM185,000 (RM3.80 = US$1.00 exactly, due to pegging) in licensing fees this year.
Thats basically C#, the VM and the core libraries. What about the APIs that are so harped upon like Windows.Forms or ASP.NET etc.? I think, when people think of.NET, they think of those as well as C#, the VM and the core libraries, rather than only C#, the VM and the core libraries.
Bizarrely, my school employs not one, not two, but four full-time network administrators. Granted, there are in excess of three hundred computers in the school, and three thousand students, not to mention at least 10 AD domains, last I checked.
Yes, Active Directory.
Then again, my school has relatively high school fees, and the IT spending is typically over the budgeted amount... Not to mention I have a sinking feeling that the school is in some sort of contract with Dell or something, every new shipment of computers to the school (4 of approx. 25 each in the last two years) has been a Dell...
The limit of 1/x as x approaches zero does not exist (unless, of course, you are using a single unsigned infinity), since if you approach it from the left it approaches negative infinity and if you approach it from the right it approaches positive infinity.
Macromedia published specifications for Flash starting with Flash 6 and Adobe continues to do so. The Flash 8 specification is available here. Admittedly it is only free as in beer, comes with usage restrictions and does not fully describe the main video codec (Sorenson Spark, a variation on H.263; though Flash 8 introduces a new one), but it's better than nothing.
Actually, 30 million cubic kilometres is 30 × 10^15, or 30 quadrillion (short scale) cubic metres. Divide that by the oceanic surface area of 361 million square kilometres and we get 83 metres. (But the world is not flat and gravitation is not uniform, so, eh.)
Nationalist Chinese as in Kuomintang Chinese or small-n nationalist Chinese?
Ah, this is easy.
The answer is all of the above.
A is correct, and the polynomial is -41/40320 x^8 + 53/1440 x^7 -1583/2880 x^6 + (4 + 283/720) x^5 - (20 + 2527/5760) x^4 + (56 + 737/1440) x^3 - (90 + 107/10080) x^2 + (78 + 7/120) x - 27.
B is correct, and the polynomial is -13/13440 x^8 + 353/10080 x^7 - 301/576 x^6 + (4 + 121/720) x^5 - (19 + 1873/5760) x^4 + (53 + 251/1440) x^3 - (84 + 305/2016) x^2 + (72 + 523/840) x - 25.
C is correct, and the polynomial is -1/1120 x^8 + 163/5040 x^7 - 347/720 x^6 + (3 + 299/360) x^5 - (17 + 943/1440) x^4 + (48 + 121/720) x^3 - (75 + 913/2520) x^2 + (64 + 197/420) x - 22.
D is correct, and the polynomial is -1/1260 x^8 + 29/1008 x^7 - 77/180 x^6 + (3 + 137/360) x^5 - (15 + 77/180) x^4 + (41 + 71/144) x^3 - (63 + 811/1260) x^2 + (53 + 251/420) x - 18.
E is correct, and the polynomial is -1/1440 x^8 + 127/5040 x^7 - 269/720 x^6 + (2 + 67/72) x^5 - (13 + 289/1440) x^4 + (34 + 589/720) x^3 - (51 + 37/40) x^2 +
(42 + 61/84) x - 14.
F is correct, and the proof is left as an excercise to the reader.
I do believe that the present Emperor of Japan had visited a Korean shrine on the island of Saipan in June 2005, but otherwise, apologies from the emperors seem sparse. News reports: [1] [2]
The Prime Ministers on the other hand, seem to have issued many war apology statements.
With your sig about Douglas N. Adams, you have no idea how funny your comment is.
The DNA of which body part?
http://www.keyhole.com/body.php?c=popup&h=home&t=f aqHome
However, Keyhole certainly is mentioning Google. See the top of the page.
1 + 1 = 11 = 101 = 1001 = 10001 = 100001 = ...
For base 1.
Not quite the article, but perhaps North Korea itself is using this as a FUD tool. I saw it yesterday on NHK news, so it should be an official statement from South Korea...
Unless, say, the victim was a CEO or someone equally "important" in the corporate structure.
And the Wikipedia entry, to further demonstrate:
ALOHAnet
"The Google(TM) Code Jam 2004 is being offered by Google Inc. ("Google") and TopCoder, Inc. ("TopCoder"). Google is using the results of the Code Jam 2004 to identify possible employees for their company."
That's the first two lines of the Terms & Conditions.
Sometimes reading legalese can help.
A PowerBook should be 1 inch thick, this iMac is 2 inches.
We will now wait for 16,777,216 (2^24) in accordance to the old maxim, "the computer scientist says that there are 1,024 metres in a kilometre, and the scientist says that there are 1,000 bytes in a kilobyte."
2.6.8.1 is out. But not on kernel.org frontpage.
See http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/kernel/v2.6/
That's not the only thing, they planned to raise e * 10^9 dollars from this IPO. Bless the geeks at Google, for they may not be there anymore...
And there's no better place to refuel than in the orbit of a hydrogen gas giant, is there?
Class A... Mmm, do you mean a whole /56 (-8)?
What would you do with 7.2057594 × 10^16 (72 quintillion) addresses?
It's too bad that one mole of hydrogen gas (a measly 2g of hydrogen gas, approx. 24 litres at s.t.p.) has approx 8,357,400.87 times more molecules than you have IPv6 addresses in a Class A block.
Interesting factoid: There are roughly enough IPv6 addresses (assuming all the 2^64 addresses are used) to address one 2^-15 of a mole...
I wonder how long before we reach one Googol addresses (~2**333). And after that, realise that variable-length addresses are most forward compatible.
It's highly unlikely that you will find one. I speak as a Malaysian.
Their sales come from corporate and other large-scale users, like my school and my father's offices. My school paid over RM185,000 (RM3.80 = US$1.00 exactly, due to pegging) in licensing fees this year.
I believe that is a measure of their first language. I suspect a lot more than 1/6 of the world speak English as a first or second language.
Thats basically C#, the VM and the core libraries. What about the APIs that are so harped upon like Windows.Forms or ASP.NET etc.? I think, when people think of .NET, they think of those as well as C#, the VM and the core libraries, rather than only C#, the VM and the core libraries.
1998: 64% to the Republicans.
2000: 53% to the Republicans.
2002: 60% to the Republicans.
2004: 42% to the Republicans.
Hmm. General trend, downwards.
Bizarrely, my school employs not one, not two, but four full-time network administrators. Granted, there are in excess of three hundred computers in the school, and three thousand students, not to mention at least 10 AD domains, last I checked.
Yes, Active Directory.
Then again, my school has relatively high school fees, and the IT spending is typically over the budgeted amount... Not to mention I have a sinking feeling that the school is in some sort of contract with Dell or something, every new shipment of computers to the school (4 of approx. 25 each in the last two years) has been a Dell...