In Vista x64: IE8 spawns a new iexplorer.exe process for every new tab inside a single windowed instance of IE8. Are you adding up the memory for each process and comparing the sum to Firefox's memory usage?
I was recently tasked with finding, customizing and ordering a laptop for my roommate. I put together several options from various brands such as Dell and HP going between a price range of $1,000-1,500. Outside of "will it be fast" her only concern was the design and colors of the laptop.
In the end the HP won; not because of what was inside, but because of what was outside. (It also happened to be the better deal for the insides)
Seems to me that time spent inside the home is the more likely culprit than viewed television hours, and that a higher rate of television viewing leads to an increased amount of time spent inside the home.
The critical bug is with the Cisco routers; a Mikrotik router merely nearly triggered the bug.
It would be possible to trigger this bug with any routing software that does not do range checking on the amount of times the ASN is pretended.
The summary is spreading FUD by making Mikrotik, the only named vendor in the summary, look like the vendor at fault.
How about an audio clip where the user has to identify the nth word of a sentence, or get even more complicated and have the user identify an adverb or something.
Not as universal as number or letter sequences, but it could work for web pages that serve a specific language demographic.
I hear everyone argue and debate that although Sony sells the console at a loss, they make up this loss by selling games.
WRONG
They make it up by packaging the system with one controller and then getting you to buy 3 more $10 controllers at $50 a piece, and other accessories that will no doubt be purchased such as "hi-def" cables.
Further revenue can be gained by charging an optional monthly fee, ala xbox-live, or a content delivery platform like Sony and Microsoft are trying to do.
Left 4 Dead is completely different for a couple of reasons, but the main one being: what you do for the previous 30 minutes is a direct impact on how well you can perform in the next 2 minutes.
For example, lets say you hit a given landmark with everyone at 10% hp and 10% ammo. You execute the next intense battle nearly flawlessly given what you had to work with, but it became too much. Your failure was not in the final battle, but in all the battles adding up to it; not conserving enough health and ammo for future fights.
So in this case, what is it that you need to get better at? the past 2 minute battle, or the previous 30 minutes? I would say the latter.
....meanwhile in northern California, I have been cursing at the excess amount of acorns dropping on my roof and hitting my door. There are too many for the squirrels in the immediate area to gather and I nearly slip to my death each morning as I step beyond my porch.
Perhaps this is some mysterious nature cycle similar to rain; it seems to drought in some areas while it floods in others.
How long until these weekly addresses are broadcast on every tv station, radio station, and cooperation controlled streaming website?
Vote for change, vote for 1984.
I don't tend to buy video games often, mostly because I don't play video games often anymore. I was stoked about SPORE and followed it for a while and was going to buy it the day it came out, until I heard about the DRM it was going to have. The result? I said "Fuck you EA" and did not buy it, did not pirate it, and did not talk about it unless it was to bitch about how shitty the DRM on it was and how that was the sole factor in my decision to not buy or play the game.
The future of video games is going to go the way of downloads and shed physical media entirely.
Take the Wii for example. Virtual Console games and Wii Ware are downloaded straight to the Wii console and are digitally locked to that particular physical console. You cannot second hand sell your gaming purchase unless you sell your entire console. This effectively prevents a used-games market for any of the downloadable games.
Doom 1 and 2 were both fast paced, mostly nonstop, action with a few moments of anticipation and suspense.
Doom 3, for me at least, required a slower pace to survive; more creeping around and peaking around corners rather than busting into a room with guns blazing. The game was trying to startle you non-stop and didn't have the same fun arcade-style vibe that the originals had.
Whenever I select a new password for myself I am always a little bit slower at typing it because I am not used to it. Weeks go by and I find myself getting faster and faster at typing my password until finally I am able to type out a 20 character password in under a second.
To this system I will be two completely different people from the time I changed my password to the time I mastered it and presumably at notable milestones in between.
XPS M1330 is $1109 when configured the same as the macbook air
excepting that you don't even have the option to select a harddrive as bad as the macbook, you get an internal optical drive, more than 1 usb port, firewire, headphone/microphone plugs, ethernet, built in webcam, a removable battery, an option to upgrade the battery,
No it is not as thin, but you actually get a computer.
When you are bored and there is nothing going on around you, you look around more and take more data in about your surroundings; you take in more detail. When you recall the memory there are more details to remember so the memory seems more vivid. If memories re like movies, the frame rate will be related to how many details you remember. The less details you have about a memory the less frames per second, so when "time passes by quickly" it is because your brain is not actively remembering many details about what you are doing.
When watching a interesting movie for example, you are paying attention to the movie and what is happening in the movie. You are not paying attention to anything else in the room and are not remembering details such as what time it is, what the weather is like, how many times the person 5 rows ahead of you picked their nose. If you are in a boring movie though or you lose interest in the movie it seems to draw out and you complain that the movie was too long. This is because you become disinterested in the movie and your brain starts picking up details about your surroundings, and you have a more vivid memory about your experience at the movie theater (not necessarily more vivid memory about the movie.)
This is also why time passes faster when you have something to do, you remember less about your surroundings and the overall detail of the memory of the experience is lessened. (Note: there is a bold line defining the memory of the experience and the memory of a task. For example I may be sitting in class writing a paper: There will be the memory of me sitting in class writing the paper -- the experience -- and there will be the memory of what I wrote -- the task)
When your brain registers something as extremely important, such as falling off a cliff or other events which can determine your possible death or the death of a loved one, your brain starts recording the event into memory at a higher frame rate than usual because your survival depends on remembering this information and using it for the future. When you recall the memory things seem more vivid than typical memories because there are WAY more details. You remember such events in slow motion BECAUSE there are more details. Analogy: If your brain is recording the event at 120 frames per second and your memory plays it back at 60 frames per second then you are going perceive the event as lasting twice as long. If you perceive something as happening over the course of 10 seconds but the logical part of your brain KNOWS it only lasted 5 seconds then you perceive it as slow motion.
Another reason it may seem to be in slow motion is becaue although the event may have lasted 5 seconds it takes you much longer to play back the event since you take time to focus and hang onto on details that you remember.
A dream may seem like it lasts hours but in fact may have only lasted 10 seconds. The reason it is perceived it lasted so long is because you don't remember any of the other 7 hours you were asleep so you are going to focus on those 10 seconds and all of the detail (even if not very vivid) it contained. 10 seconds is an infinite amount of time compared to zero.
But after conducting his error analysis Krawetz was able to determine that al-Zawahiri's image was superimposed in front of the background -- and was most likely videotaped in front of a black sheet."
I could tell this just by looking at it; who couldn't?
IIS is more common than apache on unmonitored, non-firewalled, home pc's, and thus a more suitable target for zombie botnet hoarding.
In Vista x64: IE8 spawns a new iexplorer.exe process for every new tab inside a single windowed instance of IE8. Are you adding up the memory for each process and comparing the sum to Firefox's memory usage?
I was recently tasked with finding, customizing and ordering a laptop for my roommate. I put together several options from various brands such as Dell and HP going between a price range of $1,000-1,500. Outside of "will it be fast" her only concern was the design and colors of the laptop.
In the end the HP won; not because of what was inside, but because of what was outside.
(It also happened to be the better deal for the insides)
I think "Can't see it, and it is there" is the proper phrase
If the judge of the test is a computer, then the test will always be passable by a computer.
h t t p colon slash slash slash dot dot slash dot
Seems to me that time spent inside the home is the more likely culprit than viewed television hours, and that a higher rate of television viewing leads to an increased amount of time spent inside the home.
The critical bug is with the Cisco routers; a Mikrotik router merely nearly triggered the bug.
It would be possible to trigger this bug with any routing software that does not do range checking on the amount of times the ASN is pretended.
The summary is spreading FUD by making Mikrotik, the only named vendor in the summary, look like the vendor at fault.
Major media players... like Windows Media Player and VLC!
How about an audio clip where the user has to identify the nth word of a sentence, or get even more complicated and have the user identify an adverb or something. Not as universal as number or letter sequences, but it could work for web pages that serve a specific language demographic.
I hear everyone argue and debate that although Sony sells the console at a loss, they make up this loss by selling games.
WRONG
They make it up by packaging the system with one controller and then getting you to buy 3 more $10 controllers at $50 a piece, and other accessories that will no doubt be purchased such as "hi-def" cables.
Further revenue can be gained by charging an optional monthly fee, ala xbox-live, or a content delivery platform like Sony and Microsoft are trying to do.
Left 4 Dead is completely different for a couple of reasons, but the main one being: what you do for the previous 30 minutes is a direct impact on how well you can perform in the next 2 minutes.
For example, lets say you hit a given landmark with everyone at 10% hp and 10% ammo. You execute the next intense battle nearly flawlessly given what you had to work with, but it became too much. Your failure was not in the final battle, but in all the battles adding up to it; not conserving enough health and ammo for future fights.
So in this case, what is it that you need to get better at? the past 2 minute battle, or the previous 30 minutes? I would say the latter.
....meanwhile in northern California, I have been cursing at the excess amount of acorns dropping on my roof and hitting my door. There are too many for the squirrels in the immediate area to gather and I nearly slip to my death each morning as I step beyond my porch.
Perhaps this is some mysterious nature cycle similar to rain; it seems to drought in some areas while it floods in others.
How long until these weekly addresses are broadcast on every tv station, radio station, and cooperation controlled streaming website? Vote for change, vote for 1984.
I don't tend to buy video games often, mostly because I don't play video games often anymore. I was stoked about SPORE and followed it for a while and was going to buy it the day it came out, until I heard about the DRM it was going to have. The result? I said "Fuck you EA" and did not buy it, did not pirate it, and did not talk about it unless it was to bitch about how shitty the DRM on it was and how that was the sole factor in my decision to not buy or play the game.
The future of video games is going to go the way of downloads and shed physical media entirely. Take the Wii for example. Virtual Console games and Wii Ware are downloaded straight to the Wii console and are digitally locked to that particular physical console. You cannot second hand sell your gaming purchase unless you sell your entire console. This effectively prevents a used-games market for any of the downloadable games.
Doom 1 and 2 were both fast paced, mostly nonstop, action with a few moments of anticipation and suspense.
Doom 3, for me at least, required a slower pace to survive; more creeping around and peaking around corners rather than busting into a room with guns blazing. The game was trying to startle you non-stop and didn't have the same fun arcade-style vibe that the originals had.
Whenever I select a new password for myself I am always a little bit slower at typing it because I am not used to it. Weeks go by and I find myself getting faster and faster at typing my password until finally I am able to type out a 20 character password in under a second.
To this system I will be two completely different people from the time I changed my password to the time I mastered it and presumably at notable milestones in between.
Obviously this is a problem.
What about all the gold farmers who cycle through accounts all the time?
2.5 mil in US and 5.5 in Asia
That is about right for the real player to farmer ratio.
Is someone who is in this PAC known as a PAC-man?
You mention Dell, but did you even look?
XPS M1330 is $1109 when configured the same as the macbook air
excepting that you don't even have the option to select a harddrive as bad as the macbook, you get an internal optical drive, more than 1 usb port, firewire, headphone/microphone plugs, ethernet, built in webcam, a removable battery, an option to upgrade the battery,
No it is not as thin, but you actually get a computer.
When you are bored and there is nothing going on around you, you look around more and take more data in about your surroundings; you take in more detail. When you recall the memory there are more details to remember so the memory seems more vivid. If memories re like movies, the frame rate will be related to how many details you remember. The less details you have about a memory the less frames per second, so when "time passes by quickly" it is because your brain is not actively remembering many details about what you are doing.
When watching a interesting movie for example, you are paying attention to the movie and what is happening in the movie. You are not paying attention to anything else in the room and are not remembering details such as what time it is, what the weather is like, how many times the person 5 rows ahead of you picked their nose.
If you are in a boring movie though or you lose interest in the movie it seems to draw out and you complain that the movie was too long. This is because you become disinterested in the movie and your brain starts picking up details about your surroundings, and you have a more vivid memory about your experience at the movie theater (not necessarily more vivid memory about the movie.)
This is also why time passes faster when you have something to do, you remember less about your surroundings and the overall detail of the memory of the experience is lessened. (Note: there is a bold line defining the memory of the experience and the memory of a task. For example I may be sitting in class writing a paper: There will be the memory of me sitting in class writing the paper -- the experience -- and there will be the memory of what I wrote -- the task)
When your brain registers something as extremely important, such as falling off a cliff or other events which can determine your possible death or the death of a loved one, your brain starts recording the event into memory at a higher frame rate than usual because your survival depends on remembering this information and using it for the future. When you recall the memory things seem more vivid than typical memories because there are WAY more details.
You remember such events in slow motion BECAUSE there are more details. Analogy: If your brain is recording the event at 120 frames per second and your memory plays it back at 60 frames per second then you are going perceive the event as lasting twice as long. If you perceive something as happening over the course of 10 seconds but the logical part of your brain KNOWS it only lasted 5 seconds then you perceive it as slow motion.
Another reason it may seem to be in slow motion is becaue although the event may have lasted 5 seconds it takes you much longer to play back the event since you take time to focus and hang onto on details that you remember.
A dream may seem like it lasts hours but in fact may have only lasted 10 seconds. The reason it is perceived it lasted so long is because you don't remember any of the other 7 hours you were asleep so you are going to focus on those 10 seconds and all of the detail (even if not very vivid) it contained. 10 seconds is an infinite amount of time compared to zero.
planes will only take 1 hour to get to the other side of the world in 2029, duh!
I guess if it is too difficult for you to instantly realize that 305mm x 244mm is 30.5cm and 24.4cm then I understand why you made your post.
But after conducting his error analysis Krawetz was able to determine that al-Zawahiri's image was superimposed in front of the background -- and was most likely videotaped in front of a black sheet."
I could tell this just by looking at it; who couldn't?