I guess if you have a house full of people and no option to upgrade over 1.5mbps. I have the "pro" dsl package in my area for like $35 a month. It is supposedly 7.68 mbps. I speedtest at like 5.5. I've had netflix going in two rooms before at good quality. That's enough for me. I can get 600k or so on a solid,well seeded torrent.
Frankly, I've been much happier with switching from dsl to cable about 3 years ago. My bandwidth is much more consistent and certainly less flaky than cable in my area.
this. Its definitely the support/consultants who make the $ for oracle. I used to gripe about Oracle's horrible documentation, lack of good samples, bad tools, etc, and then I realized (when I got offered by support to get a consultant down there for the nth time) that they have little incentive to document/make their products easy to use).
the RIAA are busy preparing the conditions for a big bang of a new universe with DRM built in at the subatomic level.Unfortunately, I predict that the encryption key will get leaked and they will either be forced to recall the entire universe, or just admit that they can't EVER stop you from doing whatever the heck you want with the content you purchased.
yeah, I was thinking the same thing. Rule #1: Make it easy to pronounce so people aren't afraid to look stupid saying the name wrong. You think you are going to get critical mass with Ubuntu? Think again.
didn't they say the same thing about ie 8 (that it wouldn't be available for xp?)... My place of business still has XP desktops, and I'm sure its not alone. I'm betting they will cave and produce IE9 for xp.
umm, ok, how about this? We had an officer who won a national "hero" award for jumping in a creek and saving a kids life (rightly so, it was raging with flood waters), who was later fired because he stopped a random woman, fell in love with her and began stalking her.
We had another two officers fired when they stopped a vehicle, found a bunch of pot in the trunk. Let the guy go and they sold the pot. They eventually got caught when the druggie in question got busted about a year later and gave them up in a plea deal.
I could go on and on. There are great, honest policeman. But for the most part, at least the cops I hung around, weren't too far removed personality wise, from "criminals". Also, so I don't sound so biased, I'll say this: The job wears on you. Being a cop sucks. You are put in danger, get paid crap and as one 20-year officer told me "everyone lies to you. Everyone."
In summary, if you think cops don't take bribes, steal, etc (and get away with it much of the time), you are hopelessly naive and frankly, know not of what you speak).
oh please. I was a police reporter in a 100K city for several years and got to know cops. I once sat around in the station and heard these guys trading stories about getting sexual favors from females to get out of speeding tickets (they didn't know I was in the next room, obviously). I guarantee you, policemen are bribed every day around the country with no repercussions.
funny, I did the exact same thing. It's absolutely ridiculous they pay that much for bandwidth. If they put up instructions and why they are doing it, and how by seeding torrents you can contribute for free, it would be very sucessful.
1: Buy game. 2: Update game with patch. 3: Get no-DVD patch from gamecopyworld.com
I do this with every game I buy. It would be a little annoying if I was buying brand new games and had lots of patches coming out, but I buy older games that aren't as expensive. They are new to me:)
Creationism is a belief system in search of evidence to justify it's validity.
Amazing, it seems that those who argue that evolution is "fact" don't have any "facts" to back up that "fact" even though it is, in "fact", a "fact", right?
I thought that was why it was a "Theory" because it isn't "proven" as "fact".
Wow. Learn what a theory is. Everything in science that you would consider "facts" are theories. A theory is an explanation to a set of facts that predicts other facts correctly. It does not imply that anything about it is "unproven" (that would be a hypothesis).
You obviously do not realize that here in the US most universities would not exist without the income generated by their football(US) teams.
Actually, most, if not all, college athletic depts. lose money. See "Beer and Circus" or any of the other books on the subject. They use some real creative accounting to hide this.
and I forgot to say, I work on an app that is a front end (web) for a bunch of number cruncing and reporting servers, but the database is MSSQL, it has about 400 clients (with lots of users for each company), has about a terabyte of data spread across 5 MSSQL servers, and brings in about $70 mil a year in revenue, so I'd say someone uses it.
That being said, we have a newly rewritten app/architecture using Oracle (for various reasons).
Right. The biggest advantage Oracle still has is multi-platform. On a windows box, you want to patch it, you have to be an admin (root) of the box. Period.
As for the other features, yes, partitioning (that's been there forever, since at least 2000) ncluding advanced, rule based partitioning to spread a table among multiple partitions based on rules. The clustering, you have a ton of options.
The flashback stuff is there, but still isn't as easy/painless as I watched Oracle DBAs do it for me on Oracle. Raw devices? A database is still a file, but as Oracle and SQL server pretty much tie on performance (depending on who's benchmarks you believe) I guess it isn't that great an advantage.
High security? Well, it has ssl and native encryption built in to the database, but my hunch is Oracle still has more security features. (including a more locked down platform on a streamlined *nix system, obv.)
I like the tools I see in Oracle 11, but the web-based stuff doesn't beat the responsiveness of the "real" programs with MSSQL, imho.
Like I said, it's almost a wash. MSSQL is still slightly cheaper (but not much) for licensing (but of course, you have the windows licensing costs).
I've worked with both pretty extensively, and honestly, there are pluses and minuses to both.
It used to be that oracle was more powerful/scalable, but cost more, but the price gap is pretty much gone (MSSQL has gone up, oracle has come down).
It used to be that Oracle had more features, but that gap has narrowed. It used to have more scalability options, but that has narrowed as well. Oracle does have multi-OS options that MSSQL doesn't have obviously.
It also used to be that tools (particularly for what I call 'the reluctant or defacto dba' who doesn't do it full time) had a much shallower learning curve for MSSQL, but I think that's pretty much gone (as MSSQL has gotten more features, administering it is necesarily more complex, and Oracle has worked hard at their tools).
Plus, when one player's body part comes within 6 inches of an opposing player's body part, he doesn't fall to the ground dramatically while whining to the ref.
I'll quote from a summary I had lying around: "The trade body found that the U.S. had the right to prevent offshore betting as a means of protecting public order and public morals. But it said Washington was violating trade law by targeting online gambling without equal application of the rules to American operators offering remote betting on horse and dog racing."
right.. That is the one somewhat valid argument for rigging the deck. "Action" hands generate more rake. Unfortunately, I play tournaments almost exclusively, so I don't think it's really valid (although I guess it would end the tournament quicker, so generate more rake that way).
I guess if you have a house full of people and no option to upgrade over 1.5mbps. I have the "pro" dsl package in my area for like $35 a month. It is supposedly 7.68 mbps. I speedtest at like 5.5. I've had netflix going in two rooms before at good quality. That's enough for me. I can get 600k or so on a solid,well seeded torrent.
Frankly, I've been much happier with switching from dsl to cable about 3 years ago. My bandwidth is much more consistent and certainly less flaky than cable in my area.
ok, I'm not a massive libertarian free marketer, but can't you in most places choose between DSL and cable?
this. Its definitely the support/consultants who make the $ for oracle. I used to gripe about Oracle's horrible documentation, lack of good samples, bad tools, etc, and then I realized (when I got offered by support to get a consultant down there for the nth time) that they have little incentive to document/make their products easy to use).
the RIAA are busy preparing the conditions for a big bang of a new universe with DRM built in at the subatomic level.Unfortunately, I predict that the encryption key will get leaked and they will either be forced to recall the entire universe, or just admit that they can't EVER stop you from doing whatever the heck you want with the content you purchased.
I guess I'm not cool enough to understand what your point is? My link still works.
yeah, I was thinking the same thing. Rule #1: Make it easy to pronounce so people aren't afraid to look stupid saying the name wrong. You think you are going to get critical mass with Ubuntu? Think again.
didn't they say the same thing about ie 8 (that it wouldn't be available for xp?)... My place of business still has XP desktops, and I'm sure its not alone. I'm betting they will cave and produce IE9 for xp.
Fringe? It's still 60% of the browser usage:
http://www.netmarketshare.com/browser-market-share.aspx?qprid=0
umm, ok, how about this? We had an officer who won a national "hero" award for jumping in a creek and saving a kids life (rightly so, it was raging with flood waters), who was later fired because he stopped a random woman, fell in love with her and began stalking her.
We had another two officers fired when they stopped a vehicle, found a bunch of pot in the trunk. Let the guy go and they sold the pot. They eventually got caught when the druggie in question got busted about a year later and gave them up in a plea deal.
I could go on and on. There are great, honest policeman. But for the most part, at least the cops I hung around, weren't too far removed personality wise, from "criminals". Also, so I don't sound so biased, I'll say this: The job wears on you. Being a cop sucks. You are put in danger, get paid crap and as one 20-year officer told me "everyone lies to you. Everyone."
In summary, if you think cops don't take bribes, steal, etc (and get away with it much of the time), you are hopelessly naive and frankly, know not of what you speak).
oh please. I was a police reporter in a 100K city for several years and got to know cops. I once sat around in the station and heard these guys trading stories about getting sexual favors from females to get out of speeding tickets (they didn't know I was in the next room, obviously). I guarantee you, policemen are bribed every day around the country with no repercussions.
funny, I did the exact same thing. It's absolutely ridiculous they pay that much for bandwidth. If they put up instructions and why they are doing it, and how by seeding torrents you can contribute for free, it would be very sucessful.
1: Buy game.
2: Update game with patch.
3: Get no-DVD patch from gamecopyworld.com
I do this with every game I buy. It would be a little annoying if I was buying brand new games and had lots of patches coming out, but I buy older games that aren't as expensive. They are new to me :)
Creationism is a belief system in search of evidence to justify it's validity.
Amazing, it seems that those who argue that evolution is "fact" don't have any "facts" to back up that "fact" even though it is, in "fact", a "fact", right?
I thought that was why it was a "Theory" because it isn't "proven" as "fact".
Wow. Learn what a theory is. Everything in science that you would consider "facts" are theories. A theory is an explanation to a set of facts that predicts other facts correctly. It does not imply that anything about it is "unproven" (that would be a hypothesis).
You obviously do not realize that here in the US most universities would not exist without the income generated by their football(US) teams.
Actually, most, if not all, college athletic depts. lose money. See "Beer and Circus" or any of the other books on the subject. They use some real creative accounting to hide this.
at a newspaper. I loved it. Worked wed-sat and had sunday, monday and tuesday off. 10 hour shifts.
It was the only really good thing about that job. :)
and I forgot to say, I work on an app that is a front end (web) for a bunch of number cruncing and reporting servers, but the database is MSSQL, it has about 400 clients (with lots of users for each company), has about a terabyte of data spread across 5 MSSQL servers, and brings in about $70 mil a year in revenue, so I'd say someone uses it.
That being said, we have a newly rewritten app/architecture using Oracle (for various reasons).
Right. The biggest advantage Oracle still has is multi-platform. On a windows box, you want to patch it, you have to be an admin (root) of the box. Period.
As for the other features, yes, partitioning (that's been there forever, since at least 2000) ncluding advanced, rule based partitioning to spread a table among multiple partitions based on rules. The clustering, you have a ton of options.
The flashback stuff is there, but still isn't as easy/painless as I watched Oracle DBAs do it for me on Oracle. Raw devices? A database is still a file, but as Oracle and SQL server pretty much tie on performance (depending on who's benchmarks you believe) I guess it isn't that great an advantage.
High security? Well, it has ssl and native encryption built in to the database, but my hunch is Oracle still has more security features. (including a more locked down platform on a streamlined *nix system, obv.)
I like the tools I see in Oracle 11, but the web-based stuff doesn't beat the responsiveness of the "real" programs with MSSQL, imho.
Like I said, it's almost a wash. MSSQL is still slightly cheaper (but not much) for licensing (but of course, you have the windows licensing costs).
I've worked with both pretty extensively, and honestly, there are pluses and minuses to both.
It used to be that oracle was more powerful/scalable, but cost more, but the price gap is pretty much gone (MSSQL has gone up, oracle has come down).
It used to be that Oracle had more features, but that gap has narrowed. It used to have more scalability options, but that has narrowed as well. Oracle does have multi-OS options that MSSQL doesn't have obviously.
It also used to be that tools (particularly for what I call 'the reluctant or defacto dba' who doesn't do it full time) had a much shallower learning curve for MSSQL, but I think that's pretty much gone (as MSSQL has gotten more features, administering it is necesarily more complex, and Oracle has worked hard at their tools).
Anyway, that's my two cents.
as soon as we had a president "elected" who didn't actually win the popular vote.
Guess not.
Ummm, not if by winning you mean 6-5, just above .500. We fire coaches in Oklahoma for going 8-3.
Plus, when one player's body part comes within 6 inches of an opposing player's body part, he doesn't fall to the ground dramatically while whining to the ref.
Geez. It's like the company sport. We have a freakin' webcam in there so you don't have to gather 3 other people up only to find the table is in use.
I'll quote from a summary I had lying around: "The trade body found that the U.S. had the right to prevent offshore betting as a means of protecting public order and public morals. But it said Washington was violating trade law by targeting online gambling without equal application of the rules to American operators offering remote betting on horse and dog racing."
Yeah, I'm sure that China will pay just as much attention to those WTO rulings as, say, the U.S. has to the internet-gambling rulings.
right.. That is the one somewhat valid argument for rigging the deck. "Action" hands generate more rake. Unfortunately, I play tournaments almost exclusively, so I don't think it's really valid (although I guess it would end the tournament quicker, so generate more rake that way).