Only massive data centers will remain as users of HDDs.
Massive data centers are probably the only ones with enough money to convert HDDs to SSDs for the speed enhancements. Some of the larger capacity SSDs will probably appear first for the enterprise market.
Then parents insisted that every school offer typing classes, now what was once a career option is now a basic job requirement for any white collar job.
How many white collar professionals know how to touch type without looking a keyboard. That's a skill many schools don't teach anymore. Always embarrassing to run into programmers and engineers who have to hunt-and-peck every key on the keyboard (not just the special symbols). I've learned touch typing as a kid because I thought typewriters were the coolest mechanical devices in the 1970's. A useful skill to have in the early 1990's when I submitted typewritten college papers because instructors didn't accept printouts from dot matrix printers (not even in Near Letter Quality mode), and laser printers weren't in widespread use until 1995.
In reality, they didn't solve the problem - the computer did.
I saw this quite a bit during the early days of the web. Many so called "web designers" knew how to create web pages in Dreamweaver, Frontpage or Word. But occasionally something broke, they couldn't fix it and asked me to take a look. Because I learned HTML coding with a text editor (still my preferred tool 20+ years later), I was able to plow through the bloated spaghetti code that these programs produced and fix the offending line of code.
Like engineering, like medicine, like pro football, like many other things.
My nephew wanted to be a pro baseball player. He played through grade school, high school and college. A scout sent him off to a summer baseball camp in Texas. After six weeks and 500 games later, he made the top 50 before being cut from the competition. Now he's doing PR work because he took an easy major in college. Meanwhile, a half-dozen of his friends are playing pro baseball.
Probably not. Going beyond 5Ghz limit has been a problem for the last decade or so. This is why we have multicore processors. It's easier to add more cores than go to plaid.
You have obvious stopped paying cash for goods. There are plenty of cashiers who, when the total is $18.25, and you give them $20.25, give you back your 25 cents, and then another $1.75, instead of just giving you two bucks.
If you really want to throw them for a loop, hand them $20.30 and watch them call the manager to figure out how to give back $2.05 in change. This has gotten so bad that I use only whole dollars at the stores and dump all the change into a jar at home. Coinstar does a better job counting change than these kids!
Perhaps you are talking about New Math [wikipedia.org] which was introduced in the 1960s, and then abandoned by 1970. That was five decades ago.
When I was in college during the 1990's, Harvard Calculus became the new thing in teaching introduction calculus. The textbook had only word problems from "real life applications" with none of the problems demonstrated in familiar mathematical symbols. Even the instructors had problems trying to translate the word problems into mathematical symbols on the blackboard. I gave up the class after a few weeks. The university gave up on the courses a few years later.
When I was unemployed for two years (2009-2010), and getting ready to file for chapter seven bankruptcy in 2011, the credit card companies sold my debts to the debt collecting agencies. Most debt collectors were disappointed to find a note in the file that I was filing for bankruptcy and left it at that. A few weren't so polite. One debt collector kept hanging up on me when I demanded that he acknowledged the note in the file. I called five times in five minutes, tying up his phone during that time, before he gave me what I wanted.
Their goal was to make a system capable of mimicking the knowledge and intuition of human security analysts so that attacks can be detected in real time.
That boils down to letting the expensive firewalls do their job and checking the log files later on. Meanwhile, back to minesweeper.
I live in LA and get around just fine without a car. It's more likely that you are simply lazy.
I live in the SF Bay Area and get around just find without a car. However, I do have a cheap storage unit in Sacramento. Since I currently don't have a car, I haven't been able to make the 300 mile round-trip to visit it.
Then you're an idiot. Insurance follows the car, not the driver.
What if I borrow a car and it doesn't have insurance? The police aren't going to cite me for driving without insurance if I have my own liability policy.
No way. The Orthodox Jews don't allow for cheeseburgers.
Only massive data centers will remain as users of HDDs.
Massive data centers are probably the only ones with enough money to convert HDDs to SSDs for the speed enhancements. Some of the larger capacity SSDs will probably appear first for the enterprise market.
Only with brimstone. Otherwise, it's just being in the wrong place at the wrong time.
A cow might have died.
That's 12 general processors and 20 graphic processors. My skinny vanilla latte haven't kicked in today for me to do math this early in the morning.
The architecture hasn't changed.
Unless AMD pulls a fast one by presenting a 32-core processor with eight general processors and 20 graphic processors.
I don't give a flying fuck if you are 'embarrassed' by my inability to touch type because it has had exactly zero impact on my career.
I guess your jobs don't requiring fast coding. :P
ELIZA was never this difficult.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ELIZA
Writing blog posts makes you a writer. Publishing your blog posts for public consumption makes you an author. Not all authors are writers either.
http://www.differencebetween.net/business/difference-between-author-and-writer/
Then parents insisted that every school offer typing classes, now what was once a career option is now a basic job requirement for any white collar job.
How many white collar professionals know how to touch type without looking a keyboard. That's a skill many schools don't teach anymore. Always embarrassing to run into programmers and engineers who have to hunt-and-peck every key on the keyboard (not just the special symbols). I've learned touch typing as a kid because I thought typewriters were the coolest mechanical devices in the 1970's. A useful skill to have in the early 1990's when I submitted typewritten college papers because instructors didn't accept printouts from dot matrix printers (not even in Near Letter Quality mode), and laser printers weren't in widespread use until 1995.
In reality, they didn't solve the problem - the computer did.
I saw this quite a bit during the early days of the web. Many so called "web designers" knew how to create web pages in Dreamweaver, Frontpage or Word. But occasionally something broke, they couldn't fix it and asked me to take a look. Because I learned HTML coding with a text editor (still my preferred tool 20+ years later), I was able to plow through the bloated spaghetti code that these programs produced and fix the offending line of code.
Like engineering, like medicine, like pro football, like many other things.
My nephew wanted to be a pro baseball player. He played through grade school, high school and college. A scout sent him off to a summer baseball camp in Texas. After six weeks and 500 games later, he made the top 50 before being cut from the competition. Now he's doing PR work because he took an easy major in college. Meanwhile, a half-dozen of his friends are playing pro baseball.
Is it binary (on/off) or cat (alive/dead/both)?
Less pecker.
Ever see a chicken with its head chopped off? It runs faster.
Probably not. Going beyond 5Ghz limit has been a problem for the last decade or so. This is why we have multicore processors. It's easier to add more cores than go to plaid.
You have obvious stopped paying cash for goods. There are plenty of cashiers who, when the total is $18.25, and you give them $20.25, give you back your 25 cents, and then another $1.75, instead of just giving you two bucks.
If you really want to throw them for a loop, hand them $20.30 and watch them call the manager to figure out how to give back $2.05 in change. This has gotten so bad that I use only whole dollars at the stores and dump all the change into a jar at home. Coinstar does a better job counting change than these kids!
Perhaps you are talking about New Math [wikipedia.org] which was introduced in the 1960s, and then abandoned by 1970. That was five decades ago.
When I was in college during the 1990's, Harvard Calculus became the new thing in teaching introduction calculus. The textbook had only word problems from "real life applications" with none of the problems demonstrated in familiar mathematical symbols. Even the instructors had problems trying to translate the word problems into mathematical symbols on the blackboard. I gave up the class after a few weeks. The university gave up on the courses a few years later.
http://www.math.harvard.edu/~knill/pedagogy/harvardcalculus/
When I was unemployed for two years (2009-2010), and getting ready to file for chapter seven bankruptcy in 2011, the credit card companies sold my debts to the debt collecting agencies. Most debt collectors were disappointed to find a note in the file that I was filing for bankruptcy and left it at that. A few weren't so polite. One debt collector kept hanging up on me when I demanded that he acknowledged the note in the file. I called five times in five minutes, tying up his phone during that time, before he gave me what I wanted.
HAL: Only the naughty bits.
And AI will make the Republicans even better at this.
*cough* Max Headroom *cough*
No, it boils down to having the computer check the log. Meanwhile, since your skillset has now been automated, back to McDonald's.
The minimum wage jobs at McDonald's will get automated long before computer security analysts get automated.
Their goal was to make a system capable of mimicking the knowledge and intuition of human security analysts so that attacks can be detected in real time.
That boils down to letting the expensive firewalls do their job and checking the log files later on. Meanwhile, back to minesweeper.
I live in LA and get around just fine without a car. It's more likely that you are simply lazy.
I live in the SF Bay Area and get around just find without a car. However, I do have a cheap storage unit in Sacramento. Since I currently don't have a car, I haven't been able to make the 300 mile round-trip to visit it.
Then you're an idiot. Insurance follows the car, not the driver.
What if I borrow a car and it doesn't have insurance? The police aren't going to cite me for driving without insurance if I have my own liability policy.