Those days actually where solar contributions. Several days in the row (over late Christmas to early january) we had the highest percentage of power covered by solar. However: those were holidays, so peak is to 60%?of what we have on busy workdays.
Point is: it is more a question of cloud coverage than latitude.
You usually have them memorized so far that you can read a hex dump, or partly can read it. But actively memorizing the hex codes for every instruction was hardly necessary, we already had assemblers at that time. I used to know about 1/4 of the hex codes for a 6502, but meanwhile forgot everything.
Yet, whenever Agile is used, that I've seen, it results in people doing loads of work and then discovering they've wasted lots of time because they didn't understand the problem. Of course that has nothing to do with Agile. It is Agile done wrong. Actually a prime example. In agile development you never start developing until the (sub) problem/fearure is completely understood! This is called "the definition of ready". A feature is not ready to be worked on if it is not understood properly. And this is actually true for every software development method, but in waterfall much easier to do wrong than in agile methods.
Go read a book about it and stop bashing stuff you clearly have no idea about.
I beg to differ. Not being able or willing to use a machine too order something has many reasons, but not being unable to think. One big problem e.g. is: figuring what the programmer was thinking! If the way how the machine works would be obvious, people would be dine with the order in seconds. But often only the simple stuff, like clicking on a burger and then on a coke is obvious, and then already payment might be a problem. And on top of that, many automates for ordering are suoer slow. You wait for an reaction, and presume you have misclicked. Then you click again and suddenly you have two items ordered. You realize that in the payment process, but going back via the 'cancel' button cancles the whole process...
That are only simple examples, I saw plenty of plain stupid set up ordering machines...
Of course that would be a complete disservice. The modern word 'to code' comes from the fact that you had to 'trans code' Mnemonics into binary or hex code.
Modern coders, don't code. They sinply write text in a high levle language.
I would like to point out that in Europe there have been far more attacks using fully automatic, illegal weapons like what just happened in Las Vegas, than in the USA. In fact, Europe still holds the record for the most people killed in mass incidents of this kind. That is wrong on all accounts. Except you want to write: In fact, Europe still holds the record for the most people killed in a single mass incident(no s) of this kind. So: how many incidents like this did we have in Europe the last 30 years? One? Two?
Exactly. "On January 8, 2011, just a week into her third term, Giffords was a victim of an assassination attempt near Tucson" From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
A bystander (A) with a handgun overwhelmed the assassin. Another bystander(B), who was not as close, assumed A was the assassin and tried to kill or disarm him. The misunderstanding was just resolved at the last moment.
If you are close to the action, and have the nerves, the skills and the opportunity, you can likely positively interfere.
As soon as you are more than 30 meters away, you most likely become part of the problem very quickly.
Sorry, it is extremely obvious that they never used any pouring techniques. A) no literature B) no poured building parts of ordinary architecture (temples, walls) C) no poured blocks, or what ever, in the pyramids
If you can prove otherwise, I'm sure you get a Nobel Prize.
The scrubing of a lignite fired coal plant works exactly the same as a hard coal fired plant. And please assure us that mixed up Bitumen with hard coal. Otherwise your statement makes no sense at all, as Bitumen is probably the worst fuel thinkable after burning sulfur.
Strange that the days with highest solar and wind contribution (nearly 100%) where in January days in Germany then. Hint: most of the winter is grey clouds. But at sunny days the difference between summer and winter is marginal, it is only the length of the day. So only the low ends of the cosinus curve are cut off.
Your calculation would be more accurate and comprehensive for a layman if you would look up the geographic location of the solar plant and the sun hours per year. Self invented CFs help no one and make calculations more or less meaningless.
E.g. 388 watt per home... when exactly should that happen? if the only thing in my home runnning is the fridge (computer off, light off, probably I'm away) it draws 1.2kW. Of course it only does that for 10 minutes once an hour.
CFs are completely meaningless for calculations like this.
That means most any chemical, radiological, and such testing might not show which was poured and which was not. You don't need an analysis to see if a stone us poured. You see that with blank eye.
It is extremely unlikely that the Egyptians used poured blocks. If they had: we had literature about it. Like we have about basically everything covering their lives. And we probably had ruins of stuff that *obviously* used pouring techniques.
If you can make poured blocks, it would make much more sense to simply use pouring to make big structures instead of pouring blocks on site and then moving them just like you move the chiseled blocks.
Yes and no. Strictly speaking ancient Egypt had no slaves. On the Pyramids only free men worked. In the quarries however also convicted criminals. The only slaves usually where prisoners of war, who worked everywhere but not on pyramids, and got released into freedom when they spoke enough Egyptian to settle down or to go home. There are "ceremonial slaves" like the Eunuchs in old China.
The only other way to fall into slavery was huge debts, which could made you a slave to your creditor.
The Sphinx (face) is _carved_ out of a rock. It was a huge rock just sitting there and they cut away the outside rock to carve the figurine. The rest, like legs etc. are made from relatively small bricks.
It is actually well known that they used a sand ramp circling around the pyramid, which had a center made of mud (here comes your water) and round logs. The workers were mostly hydrated with beer, well,during work time probably more with water or thinned down beer.
that the blocks WEREN'T quarried, but are some form of manmade cast stone made from ancient concrete. Which would be obvious for even a layman like me by just looking at a stone. We know for certain from where the stones were quarried, that os easy to analyze.
People are^H^H^H seem only as intelligent as the records show they were. Nothing more, nothing less.
We know like forever than the ancient world had barges, so not really sure at what you are aiming. How would the copper from Cypern/Cyprus reach Egypt if they had no sea going vessels?
And yes, most likely the Egyptians knew the earth is round. After all they traveled over sea on the east side of Africa down to Somalia and beyond. (The south tip of Somalia is beyond the Equator)
Those days actually where solar contributions.
Several days in the row (over late Christmas to early january) we had the highest percentage of power covered by solar. However: those were holidays, so peak is to 60%?of what we have on busy workdays.
Point is: it is more a question of cloud coverage than latitude.
A fridge draws about 1kW when it is actually cooling.
That is how ever not 1kWh over the course of an hour.
Either I explained wrong or you missed the difference between kW and kWh.
You usually have them memorized so far that you can read a hex dump, or partly can read it.
But actively memorizing the hex codes for every instruction was hardly necessary, we already had assemblers at that time.
I used to know about 1/4 of the hex codes for a 6502, but meanwhile forgot everything.
And the US have about 30 every year ... so what is your point?
Yet, whenever Agile is used, that I've seen, it results in people doing loads of work and then discovering they've wasted lots of time because they didn't understand the problem.
Of course that has nothing to do with Agile. It is Agile done wrong. Actually a prime example.
In agile development you never start developing until the (sub) problem/fearure is completely understood! This is called "the definition of ready". A feature is not ready to be worked on if it is not understood properly. And this is actually true for every software development method, but in waterfall much easier to do wrong than in agile methods.
Go read a book about it and stop bashing stuff you clearly have no idea about.
I beg to differ. ...
Not being able or willing to use a machine too order something has many reasons, but not being unable to think.
One big problem e.g. is: figuring what the programmer was thinking!
If the way how the machine works would be obvious, people would be dine with the order in seconds.
But often only the simple stuff, like clicking on a burger and then on a coke is obvious, and then already payment might be a problem.
And on top of that, many automates for ordering are suoer slow. You wait for an reaction, and presume you have misclicked. Then you click again and suddenly you have two items ordered.
You realize that in the payment process, but going back via the 'cancel' button cancles the whole process
That are only simple examples, I saw plenty of plain stupid set up ordering machines ...
Most likely they used mnemonics and most definitely not decimal.
Of course that would be a complete disservice.
The modern word 'to code' comes from the fact that you had to 'trans code' Mnemonics into binary or hex code.
Modern coders, don't code. They sinply write text in a high levle language.
Na, I guess it is enough to restrict them to rooms in hotels on floors they can reach via the stairs.
I would like to point out that in Europe there have been far more attacks using fully automatic, illegal weapons like what just happened in Las Vegas, than in the USA. In fact, Europe still holds the record for the most people killed in mass incidents of this kind.
That is wrong on all accounts.
Except you want to write: In fact, Europe still holds the record for the most people killed in a single mass incident(no s) of this kind.
So: how many incidents like this did we have in Europe the last 30 years? One? Two?
citation needed :D
Exactly.
"On January 8, 2011, just a week into her third term, Giffords was a victim of an assassination attempt near Tucson" From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
A bystander (A) with a handgun overwhelmed the assassin.
Another bystander(B), who was not as close, assumed A was the assassin and tried to kill or disarm him.
The misunderstanding was just resolved at the last moment.
If you are close to the action, and have the nerves, the skills and the opportunity, you can likely positively interfere.
As soon as you are more than 30 meters away, you most likely become part of the problem very quickly.
Sorry, it is extremely obvious that they never used any pouring techniques.
A) no literature
B) no poured building parts of ordinary architecture (temples, walls)
C) no poured blocks, or what ever, in the pyramids
If you can prove otherwise, I'm sure you get a Nobel Prize.
What has that to do with 'hype'?
A 10MW plant with a 6MW storage obviously is a balancing power plant, facepalm.
The scrubing of a lignite fired coal plant works exactly the same as a hard coal fired plant.
And please assure us that mixed up Bitumen with hard coal.
Otherwise your statement makes no sense at all, as Bitumen is probably the worst fuel thinkable after burning sulfur.
Strange that the days with highest solar and wind contribution (nearly 100%) where in January days in Germany then.
Hint: most of the winter is grey clouds.
But at sunny days the difference between summer and winter is marginal, it is only the length of the day. So only the low ends of the cosinus curve are cut off.
Your calculation would be more accurate and comprehensive for a layman if you would look up the geographic location of the solar plant and the sun hours per year.
Self invented CFs help no one and make calculations more or less meaningless.
E.g. 388 watt per home ... when exactly should that happen?
if the only thing in my home runnning is the fridge (computer off, light off, probably I'm away) it draws 1.2kW. Of course it only does that for 10 minutes once an hour.
CFs are completely meaningless for calculations like this.
No idea if you attempt to be funny.
The typical way to export electricity is called a wire, or a cable.
That means most any chemical, radiological, and such testing might not show which was poured and which was not.
You don't need an analysis to see if a stone us poured.
You see that with blank eye.
It is extremely unlikely that the Egyptians used poured blocks. If they had: we had literature about it. Like we have about basically everything covering their lives.
And we probably had ruins of stuff that *obviously* used pouring techniques.
If you can make poured blocks, it would make much more sense to simply use pouring to make big structures instead of pouring blocks on site and then moving them just like you move the chiseled blocks.
Yes and no.
Strictly speaking ancient Egypt had no slaves.
On the Pyramids only free men worked.
In the quarries however also convicted criminals.
The only slaves usually where prisoners of war, who worked everywhere but not on pyramids, and got released into freedom when they spoke enough Egyptian to settle down or to go home.
There are "ceremonial slaves" like the Eunuchs in old China.
The only other way to fall into slavery was huge debts, which could made you a slave to your creditor.
The Sphinx (face) is _carved_ out of a rock. It was a huge rock just sitting there and they cut away the outside rock to carve the figurine.
The rest, like legs etc. are made from relatively small bricks.
It is actually well known that they used a sand ramp circling around the pyramid, which had a center made of mud (here comes your water) and round logs.
The workers were mostly hydrated with beer, well,during work time probably more with water or thinned down beer.
that the blocks WEREN'T quarried, but are some form of manmade cast stone made from ancient concrete.
Which would be obvious for even a layman like me by just looking at a stone.
We know for certain from where the stones were quarried, that os easy to analyze.
People are^H^H^H seem only as intelligent as the records show they were. Nothing more, nothing less.
We know like forever than the ancient world had barges, so not really sure at what you are aiming.
How would the copper from Cypern/Cyprus reach Egypt if they had no sea going vessels?
And yes, most likely the Egyptians knew the earth is round. After all they traveled over sea on the east side of Africa down to Somalia and beyond. (The south tip of Somalia is beyond the Equator)
It is an excellent way to have the government spent its money and have basically zero unemployment.
And unlike you, 5 years ago, hey had universal health care in Egypt 5000 years ago.