Watching someone else' head motions is never anything like it matching your own. Unless you've worn one, you can't speak to that with any basis in reality.
Start with "about:config?filter=browser.urlbar.unifiedcomplete" - also consider "about:config?filter=xpinstall.signatures.required" if you need to use unsigned addons.
git pull [URL] [do stuff] git add [modified files/dirs] (might not be necessary, probably mixing up git and hg) git commit -m "message" git push
WOW, That was so incredibly complicated! Seriously, I'm not seeing a difference (to the user) for basic use between svn and git. I'm speaking from the perspective of a user who has a few local repos for random things he's created.
Serious question, as I'm not really a coder... what makes Git harder on newcomers than svn, cvs, and so on? I've touched git, hg, svn, and cvs, and of them, git/hg seem to be MUCH easier to work with than subversion or cvs (especially cvs - I hate more than is healthy).
From my layman experience I'd consider git and mercurial more or less equivalent. The only downside I could see is how clients effectively get the whole branch history locally, which can grow to be pretty large if people aren't disciplined about avoiding large binary files and such.
What's wrong with the rear, where I presume the DC terminals are located? You should have little access holes in your rack so you can feed cables between racks if necessary. Doesn't take much, an inch of clearance is way more than you need - but it's enough to shove a console cable through if you need to access it from the wrong side,
"I was not thinking a lot when I got in. There was so much work to be done. We had so many problems around the world. I didn't really stop and think what kind of email system will there be."
... and you shouldn't have. It's not your damn job. There's IT people who are supposed to do that, not you. You created this problem by trying to run the chef's kitchen for him.
Just be sure to reinforce the frames and the walls as well. A steel door doesn't mean anything if the frame is rotting apart, or the wall is paper thin.
The shot doesn't have to have much more than potential energy to break the thing. A prop hitting a stationary metal ball is destructive enough (to the prop)
Heard on NPR this morning that they think it's an inside job, and has all the hallmarks of it being so.
Apparently someone got tired of the all unethical behavior. Something about an account being free to create, but $20 to delete (and then not really being removed, or something like that)
Oh. To answer your question - I've recorded at 96khz and played it back at 1/4 speed, and I don't recall seeing a dead zone on the resulting audible spectrum. So I couldn't say anything about 48khz and beyond, and I'll also caution I was hardly being scientific about it.
If I had anything that could reliably produce a sweep up there, I'd work on creating a graph for you. Sadly, I don't:|
Not bad for a cheap recorder, though. Even the battery life is nice. The -only- problem I have with it is the chassis is 'noisy' - I have a bit of paper towel wedged between the battery and the battery access panel, to keep it from rattling. If you're not handling it actively, it's quiet.
My $100 recorder picks up bird songs well beyond 20kHz. Doesn't seem to be aliasing either, as the pitch changes move harmonically and in the same direction as the stuff lower down that we can hear.
Don't forget... They didn't build the A-10 and decide to put the GAU-8 in it - they took the GAU-8 and gave it wings. It's hard to beat that kind of focused purpose.
Watching someone else' head motions is never anything like it matching your own. Unless you've worn one, you can't speak to that with any basis in reality.
Think of it as a massive site filled with their own little slashdots that are, more or less, self moderated.
Isn't flipping "about:config?filter=browser.pocket.enabled" enough?
Start with "about:config?filter=browser.urlbar.unifiedcomplete" - also consider "about:config?filter=xpinstall.signatures.required" if you need to use unsigned addons.
looks a bit like Han Solo's Millennium Falcon, towed in for repairs after a run-in with the Imperial fleet.
Sure, in the same way a croissant does.
Meaning, not at all.
git pull [URL]
[do stuff]
git add [modified files/dirs] (might not be necessary, probably mixing up git and hg)
git commit -m "message"
git push
WOW, That was so incredibly complicated! Seriously, I'm not seeing a difference (to the user) for basic use between svn and git. I'm speaking from the perspective of a user who has a few local repos for random things he's created.
Serious question, as I'm not really a coder... what makes Git harder on newcomers than svn, cvs, and so on? I've touched git, hg, svn, and cvs, and of them, git/hg seem to be MUCH easier to work with than subversion or cvs (especially cvs - I hate more than is healthy).
From my layman experience I'd consider git and mercurial more or less equivalent. The only downside I could see is how clients effectively get the whole branch history locally, which can grow to be pretty large if people aren't disciplined about avoiding large binary files and such.
What's wrong with the rear, where I presume the DC terminals are located? You should have little access holes in your rack so you can feed cables between racks if necessary. Doesn't take much, an inch of clearance is way more than you need - but it's enough to shove a console cable through if you need to access it from the wrong side,
"Average" anyones don't buy datacenter equipment.
The TPP itself isn't a bad idea, the problem is the bullshit they're weaving into it that, really, doesn't have anything to do with it.
In Maine... where you hide indoors 85% of the year because it's either cold as hell outside or the mosquito swarms are like to murder you.
I keep coming back to see if you've stopped shooting yourself in the foot.
It appears that you have not.
Just be sure to reinforce the frames and the walls as well. A steel door doesn't mean anything if the frame is rotting apart, or the wall is paper thin.
Go grab a model aircraft. Spin up the prop, and drop a piece of shot into the prop.
You'll probably end up with a broken prop, without any appreciable ballistic energy being involved.
The shot doesn't have to have much more than potential energy to break the thing. A prop hitting a stationary metal ball is destructive enough (to the prop)
That's 200 feet, not 200 meters. HUGE difference.
No, you just failed at formatting.
My favorite are all the fucking goomoji in the subjects these days. "||mail.google.com/mail/e/" made a welcome addition to my uBlock filters...
The supplier who gave them bad or subgrade steel should be, they're about to get reamed...
Heard on NPR this morning that they think it's an inside job, and has all the hallmarks of it being so.
Apparently someone got tired of the all unethical behavior. Something about an account being free to create, but $20 to delete (and then not really being removed, or something like that)
Oh. To answer your question - I've recorded at 96khz and played it back at 1/4 speed, and I don't recall seeing a dead zone on the resulting audible spectrum. So I couldn't say anything about 48khz and beyond, and I'll also caution I was hardly being scientific about it.
If I had anything that could reliably produce a sweep up there, I'd work on creating a graph for you. Sadly, I don't :|
Not bad for a cheap recorder, though. Even the battery life is nice. The -only- problem I have with it is the chassis is 'noisy' - I have a bit of paper towel wedged between the battery and the battery access panel, to keep it from rattling. If you're not handling it actively, it's quiet.
My $100 recorder picks up bird songs well beyond 20kHz. Doesn't seem to be aliasing either, as the pitch changes move harmonically and in the same direction as the stuff lower down that we can hear.
Don't forget... They didn't build the A-10 and decide to put the GAU-8 in it - they took the GAU-8 and gave it wings. It's hard to beat that kind of focused purpose.