For each clock cycle, you'll have one increase and one decrease in the voltage of clock signals. Basic law of physics: a change in voltage (electric field flux) will correspond to a change in induced electromagnetic radiation. The signal is very weak, but it's still at 900mHz.
Right. From 6 feet above sea level, the horizon appears about 4-5 miles out. The earth is curved, but not too sharply. The mast of a tall ship can still be seen 30 miles away (I used to be able to see a very distant lighthouse from our beach). Even with slow ships, rotten currents, and drunk sailors, boats still traveled faster than 10 miles a day...
That wasn't at all insensitive. William used the Murrow building as an example of worldwide instability, but made a slight error -- someone else kindly noted the error. It's the thought that counts, so please don't play devil's advocate.
Also, your being from OJK is totally irrelevant. If the comments truly were insensitive, it would be insult to all of us. The bombing affected the entire nation in one way or another.
Don't support McCain because of one good bill. He's worked on nasty Internet censorship bills too...
The key to McCain is that he fervently supports legislation because he thinks is right, not because of business and poll sentiments. Granted, he is occassionally ill-advised... but nobody's perfect. I'd prefer a President with a bit of conviction over a spineless fool who relies on polls to choose his wording in speeches.
The book has been around for at least 3 years. Good book. GAs have a few problems: they're not guaranteed to find a solution, and they can't be characterized in terms of their running times/space requirements. This doesn't make them easy to market...
Not a bad idea. Needs an interactive factor, though, because Linux news changes so quickly. Maybe the media needs to learn to use newsgroups and post questions.
I don't blame you at all -- most Slashdot threads wouldn't exist were not for outside news stories, so we're grateful. Reporters have to cover the news, and the founder and chairman of the linux kernel is definitely news.
But the ZDNet reporter doesn't make the media look big on brains. Linus isn't putting up shields -- he's just being pursued by more reporters than ever (thanks to more Linux in the news), and can still give only so much of his time to talking to them.
Yes, I know that X-rays aren't visible to the human eye (it'd make airport security an interesting procedure;)
So, you have to map the higher frequencies down to the visible range. Conversely, night-vision goggles kick infrared light up into the visible range.
The point I was trying to make is that their mapping function is non-linear; they use a damped Boltzman (black-body) distribution, adjusted to look like fire. Pretty picture for the media, but utterly useless as a piece of evidence.
Lightweight, flexible, easy to read (without a backlight), and you're not down $200 if you 'em in the pool. Granted, you can't search and copy, but I read books for recreation anyway.
Anybody have any news on the 'ePaper' that PARC developed and MIT is working on?
I think Xing is very good. It helps to spin up your CD if you're using ASPI and avoid join stereo, but other than that, the files are well-compressed, and the quality is very nice.
I believe that they use benzene to contaminate ethanol. It's not too nice either -- kills the immune system.
On the subject of methanol poisoning (you're right about oxidation to formaldehyde and formic acid), aspartame (NutraSweet) disassociates under acidic conditions (i.e. stomach) to yield a couple of amino acids and methanol, in a one-to-one ratio. Yea!
For each clock cycle, you'll have one increase and one decrease in the voltage of clock signals. Basic law of physics: a change in voltage (electric field flux) will correspond to a change in induced electromagnetic radiation. The signal is very weak, but it's still at 900mHz.
Right. From 6 feet above sea level, the horizon appears about 4-5 miles out. The earth is curved, but not too sharply. The mast of a tall ship can still be seen 30 miles away (I used to be able to see a very distant lighthouse from our beach). Even with slow ships, rotten currents, and drunk sailors, boats still traveled faster than 10 miles a day...
That wasn't at all insensitive. William used the Murrow building as an example of worldwide instability, but made a slight error -- someone else kindly noted the error. It's the thought that counts, so please don't play devil's advocate.
Also, your being from OJK is totally irrelevant. If the comments truly were insensitive, it would be insult to all of us. The bombing affected the entire nation in one way or another.
The fate of my house is probably not to catch fire, but I still keep a fire extinguisher handy.
Don't support McCain because of one good bill. He's worked on nasty Internet censorship bills too...
The key to McCain is that he fervently supports legislation because he thinks is right, not because of business and poll sentiments. Granted, he is occassionally ill-advised... but nobody's perfect. I'd prefer a President with a bit of conviction over a spineless fool who relies on polls to choose his wording in speeches.
good irony. hehe
Apache on MKLinux I can understand... but MacOS is evil.
So far, the IBM's aren't really clones -- they're identical to the Palms, other than different coloring and labelling.
PalmOS cellphone? nice.
The book has been around for at least 3 years. Good book. GAs have a few problems: they're not guaranteed to find a solution, and they can't be characterized in terms of their running times/space requirements. This doesn't make them easy to market...
I saw one the other day where a click on its blue background would generate waves -I think it was Sega.
If Java banners catch on, marketing will take over and it'll get ugly (right now, they're kind of a showcase of Java itself).
I don't want 200K applets that sing to me and flash Wired neon palettes until I click on them.
Not a bad idea. Needs an interactive factor, though, because Linux news changes so quickly. Maybe the media needs to learn to use newsgroups and post questions.
r
Media newsgroups. Ironic, no?
I don't blame you at all -- most Slashdot threads wouldn't exist were not for outside news stories, so we're grateful. Reporters have to cover the news, and the founder and chairman of the linux kernel is definitely news.
But the ZDNet reporter doesn't make the media look big on brains. Linus isn't putting up shields -- he's just being pursued by more reporters than ever (thanks to more Linux in the news), and can still give only so much of his time to talking to them.
What ever happened to that movie? I saw it then Broken Lizard came into town, and then it just sort of vanished.
always a worthy cause. sorry, I'm biased ;)
Yes, I know that X-rays aren't visible to the human eye (it'd make airport security an interesting procedure ;)
So, you have to map the higher frequencies down to the visible range. Conversely, night-vision goggles kick infrared light up into the visible range.
The point I was trying to make is that their mapping function is non-linear; they use a damped Boltzman (black-body) distribution, adjusted to look like fire. Pretty picture for the media, but utterly useless as a piece of evidence.
r
They're definitely doing some Photoshop work on thes. X-rays don't look like fire, last time I checked.
In the end..... it all comes back to old simpsons re-runs.
mmmmmmmmmm.... reruns. <drool>
What a /. rip-off! If they were worth anything, andover.net would have to set their lawyers loose. hehe
I'm talking about real books, not your PalmPilot.
Lightweight, flexible, easy to read (without a backlight), and you're not down $200 if you 'em in the pool. Granted, you can't search and copy, but I read books for recreation anyway.
Anybody have any news on the 'ePaper' that PARC developed and MIT is working on?
Yes, you've said that already.
I think Xing is very good. It helps to spin up your CD if you're using ASPI and avoid join stereo, but other than that, the files are well-compressed, and the quality is very nice.
ah, sorry
Anyway, software "at the time" couldn't render shadows in real time. I prefer the newer machines.
I believe that they use benzene to contaminate ethanol. It's not too nice either -- kills the immune system.
On the subject of methanol poisoning (you're right about oxidation to formaldehyde and formic acid), aspartame (NutraSweet) disassociates under acidic conditions (i.e. stomach) to yield a couple of amino acids and methanol, in a one-to-one ratio. Yea!
Yes, I'd like to see your 386 play games like Half Life...
I saw a blue screen in Las Vegas too...big light sign in front of my hotel. I'll go find the picture and get it online...