It was widely reported at the time that the government (who were very unhappy) had the body dies destroyed. None of the articles mention how they will build new cars after the legacy stock of body parts is depleted.
But there's evidence that they're at the bottom of Ards Bay, Connemara, being used as fish net anchors.
They should have allowed us to download it already. You have to purchase a device. Or, you can "apply" for a "license," but only if you're not an end user.
Hopefully, now that AJ America is going away, they will bring back the FTA Al Jazeera English. It's encrypted now probably to not cannibalize Al Jazeera America.
No. That is patently false. Al Jazeera America was launched in late August of 2013. The article and network Clinton was referring to was Al Jazeera, and specifically the Al Ajazeera English service.
Al Jazeera English was good enough. I was watching it on FTA satellite TV before Al Jazeera America launched. For some reason it is now encrypted on GlobeCast Channel 463 (Galaxy 19 12152 H, transponder 26).
When Al Jazeera America came out I was mystified. Its older sister Al Jazeera English was more than good enough. At the same time A-J English was removed from MHz Networks' UHF channels in the DC area and replaced with A-J America. Hopefully MHz Networks will be able to offer A-J English again.
Years ago, I really tried to use desktop email clients. I'd try whatever the latest Netscape/Firefox folks cobbled together from their 20-year-old code base. Then I'd try Eudora again. Then a dozen proprietary clients, even the old Outlook Express before MSFT killed it. Occasionally I'd revisit tkRat and another two dozen Unix apps from Elm to Pine to Mutt and Evolution and Emacs VM and even Emacs Rmail.
And then it dawned on me that no matter how perfect I could get my email experience to be on the desktop, I still could not access my email from everywhere. I moved all of my email online and I never looked back.
It hasn't been rosy lately. SquirrelMail has been badly neglected for years so better things are available out there. I'd like to use Amazon Workmail if it didn't cost $4 per user per month.
I know this doesn't answer your question directly, but please consider the universe of webmail.
Netflix is trying to impress its shareholders by covering up the fact that they have blithely ignored, or have been ignorant of, established VBR technology that has been in use by the satellite TV companies for over TWENTY years.
Of course, in the satellite TV case, the window for hierarchical compression is much smaller. Netflix finally realized (duh!) that you can do this over the entire video production.
So, here is Netflix trying to cover up the fact that they were ignorant when it comes to real-world video content encoding by saying "Hey, look at this new thing we figured out!"
It's amateur night at supply chain management school.
Please, don't insult us. Chipotle management screwed up in their abortive quest to use the Chipotle chain to finance their big dreams of creating a gourmet restaurant chain.
They never intended to keep the Chipotle brand around after they achieved their dream, but it never happened, and now we have lots of people with puke bugs.
> I don't know what "high pressures" kriston is talking about.
I've been installing processors since the late 1980s. If you've ever installed something before the Pentium 4 you'd know that high pressure just wasn't required. Processors only required enough pressure to keep it steady and fully flat, not to squash the heck out of it. Even today, AMD processors still don't require these forces to be present.
What? Read my comment again. I am blaming them for having such high pressures.
And you're wrong about Intel not shipping with stock coolers. I have bought several dozen Intel CPUs in the past five years and each has an Intel-branded cooling solution shipped with it.
Well, maybe Intel should stop requiring such high pressures on the heat sink/heat spreader interface. Surely there's a more efficient way to handle cooling. This idiocy started with the Pentium 4 and needs to stop.
If you're serious about profiling your database, you should be using the EXPLAIN command and analyzing what the query planner is up to.
I have worked virtual miracles on boggy PostgreSQL databases using EXPLAIN and careful index creation (with my choice of algorithm with three- and four-way column indices). MySQL just can't compete.
First, no, they are in the "quiet" zone near the radio telescope because there is little to no radio signals there.
Second, microwave ovens are not fully shielded and they indeed leak RF energy. They are only shielded enough to protect human tissue. My microwave oven blocks my 2.4 GHz cordless phones and WiFi tablets nearby.
Also, when you open the door without pressing "stop", a huge burst will be emitted from the microwave oven. Please read this article concerning microwave ovens and another radio telescope:
This article further supports that it's nothing but mental illness.
There's a town full of these sufferers in Green Bank, WV, near the radio telescope. These people are actually bringing their cell phones and even run MICROWAVE OVENS and none of them feel any "allergies" to them. Microwave ovens are almost the same frequency as WiFi is.
It's mental illness.
Not to mention they are polluting the clear airwaves required for operating the telescope.
Yes, aside from the Pentium G3258 Anniversary Edition that regularly dips below $50 USD, the 64-bit AMD Sempron and the AMD APU processors and their absurdly low-priced motherboards are also a great deal.
Here, in my home lab, I also experiment with several AMD APU processors, like the A6-3670. Don't disregard the very affordable AMD A6, A8, and A10 "APU" processor solutions. They have very high cache and multiple cores. If you don't require high-performance graphics, these are ideal.
If you do require high-performance graphics, any three-year-old "midrange" graphics card added onto these systems will suit the bill.
He really has to do this. The company isn't growing anymore, and has not been growing for a while. All of the side projects and ostentatious giving is necessary to try to hype up this over-hyped stock. I'm sorry for FB fanboys, but this is the dark and honest truth.
From a human standpoint, his commitment is amazing, much like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been and continues to be.
I say, best of luck trying to keep FB "profitable."
It was widely reported at the time that the government (who were very unhappy) had the body dies destroyed. None of the articles mention how they will build new cars after the legacy stock of body parts is depleted.
But there's evidence that they're at the bottom of Ards Bay, Connemara, being used as fish net anchors.
http://www.dmcnews.com/Resourc...
I'm not sure if everyone already knew this but Shodan *started* as an non-secured webcam search engine back in 2009.
Yeah, and how's that universe pattern search going? Did he find the meaning of life yet?
Is this the kind of advice we should take?
> Likely they are keeping the code under cover per Googles request
I don't get it. We already have AOSP, don't we? What's more to hide?
They should have allowed us to download it already. You have to purchase a device. Or, you can "apply" for a "license," but only if you're not an end user.
These guys are really not being helpful.
Hopefully, now that AJ America is going away, they will bring back the FTA Al Jazeera English. It's encrypted now probably to not cannibalize Al Jazeera America.
No. That is patently false. Al Jazeera America was launched in late August of 2013. The article and network Clinton was referring to was Al Jazeera, and specifically the Al Ajazeera English service.
AJ America was only launched in late August of 2013. What you were probably watching for years was AJ English.
Al Jazeera English was good enough. I was watching it on FTA satellite TV before Al Jazeera America launched. For some reason it is now encrypted on GlobeCast Channel 463 (Galaxy 19 12152 H, transponder 26).
When Al Jazeera America came out I was mystified. Its older sister Al Jazeera English was more than good enough. At the same time A-J English was removed from MHz Networks' UHF channels in the DC area and replaced with A-J America. Hopefully MHz Networks will be able to offer A-J English again.
Here's more info. Looks like A-J English is still encrypted for North America.
http://www.aljazeera.com/watchaje/20091022172112636517.html
The old MHz Networks announcement when A-J English was replaced with A-J America:
http://www.mhznetworks.org/blog/al-jazeera-english-departs-mhz-august-20
Years ago, I really tried to use desktop email clients. I'd try whatever the latest Netscape/Firefox folks cobbled together from their 20-year-old code base. Then I'd try Eudora again. Then a dozen proprietary clients, even the old Outlook Express before MSFT killed it. Occasionally I'd revisit tkRat and another two dozen Unix apps from Elm to Pine to Mutt and Evolution and Emacs VM and even Emacs Rmail.
And then it dawned on me that no matter how perfect I could get my email experience to be on the desktop, I still could not access my email from everywhere. I moved all of my email online and I never looked back.
It hasn't been rosy lately. SquirrelMail has been badly neglected for years so better things are available out there. I'd like to use Amazon Workmail if it didn't cost $4 per user per month.
I know this doesn't answer your question directly, but please consider the universe of webmail.
What should be done is to produce an open-source, fully accelerated graphics driver.
I like the Pi and Pi2 but this graphics architecture really needs to be opened up.
Exactly.
Netflix is trying to impress its shareholders by covering up the fact that they have blithely ignored, or have been ignorant of, established VBR technology that has been in use by the satellite TV companies for over TWENTY years.
Of course, in the satellite TV case, the window for hierarchical compression is much smaller. Netflix finally realized (duh!) that you can do this over the entire video production.
So, here is Netflix trying to cover up the fact that they were ignorant when it comes to real-world video content encoding by saying "Hey, look at this new thing we figured out!"
It's amateur night at supply chain management school.
Please, don't insult us. Chipotle management screwed up in their abortive quest to use the Chipotle chain to finance their big dreams of creating a gourmet restaurant chain.
They never intended to keep the Chipotle brand around after they achieved their dream, but it never happened, and now we have lots of people with puke bugs.
Details here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Oh, silly me, I didn't fully understand it was the monitor's problem for not allowing you to use it at 720p long enough to change it to 1080p.
Sorry about that.
It's limited to 720p? That's so disappointing. Can it be modified to output 1080p or 1080i?
> I don't know what "high pressures" kriston is talking about.
I've been installing processors since the late 1980s. If you've ever installed something before the Pentium 4 you'd know that high pressure just wasn't required. Processors only required enough pressure to keep it steady and fully flat, not to squash the heck out of it. Even today, AMD processors still don't require these forces to be present.
What? Read my comment again. I am blaming them for having such high pressures.
And you're wrong about Intel not shipping with stock coolers. I have bought several dozen Intel CPUs in the past five years and each has an Intel-branded cooling solution shipped with it.
Not sure why you aren't aware of these things.
Well, maybe Intel should stop requiring such high pressures on the heat sink/heat spreader interface. Surely there's a more efficient way to handle cooling. This idiocy started with the Pentium 4 and needs to stop.
If you're serious about profiling your database, you should be using the EXPLAIN command and analyzing what the query planner is up to.
I have worked virtual miracles on boggy PostgreSQL databases using EXPLAIN and careful index creation (with my choice of algorithm with three- and four-way column indices). MySQL just can't compete.
First, no, they are in the "quiet" zone near the radio telescope because there is little to no radio signals there.
Second, microwave ovens are not fully shielded and they indeed leak RF energy. They are only shielded enough to protect human tissue. My microwave oven blocks my 2.4 GHz cordless phones and WiFi tablets nearby.
Also, when you open the door without pressing "stop", a huge burst will be emitted from the microwave oven. Please read this article concerning microwave ovens and another radio telescope:
http://www.skyandtelescope.com...
"They" did a study.
You're going to have to work harder than that.
This article further supports that it's nothing but mental illness.
There's a town full of these sufferers in Green Bank, WV, near the radio telescope. These people are actually bringing their cell phones and even run MICROWAVE OVENS and none of them feel any "allergies" to them. Microwave ovens are almost the same frequency as WiFi is.
It's mental illness.
Not to mention they are polluting the clear airwaves required for operating the telescope.
Nope, those are long shots. FB is in a very precarious position, like AOL in the early 2000s.
Yes, aside from the Pentium G3258 Anniversary Edition that regularly dips below $50 USD, the 64-bit AMD Sempron and the AMD APU processors and their absurdly low-priced motherboards are also a great deal.
Here, in my home lab, I also experiment with several AMD APU processors, like the A6-3670. Don't disregard the very affordable AMD A6, A8, and A10 "APU" processor solutions. They have very high cache and multiple cores. If you don't require high-performance graphics, these are ideal.
If you do require high-performance graphics, any three-year-old "midrange" graphics card added onto these systems will suit the bill.
He really has to do this. The company isn't growing anymore, and has not been growing for a while. All of the side projects and ostentatious giving is necessary to try to hype up this over-hyped stock. I'm sorry for FB fanboys, but this is the dark and honest truth.
From a human standpoint, his commitment is amazing, much like the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has been and continues to be.
I say, best of luck trying to keep FB "profitable."