All departments that are self-funding (receive income >= expenses) eare still open. Hence the government by definition only loses money from those departments.
The people of the USA voted for Trump which the wall was one of his key issues that got him voted in. We don't live in a country where the heckler's veto rules.
There's a lot more than gaming computers. Many, many businesses run on Intel and will not move away from it until AMD can implement the same instruction set. Yes AMD has a mostly compatible instruction set, but that doesn't mean everything about it is exactly the same, AMD is pretty opinionated when it comes to how to implement some things "better".
Way back when, IBM built a drop-in compatible 80486DX33 chip as well, but it wouldn't run WfW 3.11. AMD won't run with certain virtualization platforms, I don't think VMWare has Ryzen on it's list at all and there is a bunch of stuff out there, computationally optimized things, that are written to run on Intel and will run like sticky molasses on AMD, even when compiled from source.
It's a lot of inertia for AMD to overcome and historically, AMD has had these outliers for a few months/years (remember the hype around Opteron) but then totally shit the bed for years to come.
People in the industry know. Right now self-driving cars are an easy way to raise funds. Much like the.com era, everyone wants a piece of the pie. Eventually after about 20 years we'll laughing at the time we were awed by the self-driving car equivalent of Badger badger and lament the situation with Pewdiepie while everyone just uses self-driving cars to get delivery of hookers and blow.
There is less and less reason to keep driving around like fools every day for work. Cars, self driving or not, will feel that pressure as the next generation will demand more to flex home and work. So cars will once again become a thing for leisure and the powerful who will either be driven around by someone experienced or doing it themselves for the thrill of it.
Self-driving cars for the 'common folk' will be around but will be very simple automatons without all the high-tech gadgets driven in tandem with a skilled delivery driver much like today's truckers, taxi and UPS drivers.
$76,470 for average federal government wages vs $44,600 for average private sector wages - actually 42% although it's misleading because government workers don't make as much at the high ends (eg >250k) whereas private sector it isn't nearly as rare.
Depends on your jurisdiction. Just because a thing is sitting by itself, doesn't mean it's legally considered abandoned. You don't 'abandon' your car or motorcycle when you park it. If you take it before it's considered 'abandoned', it's called theft, the city impounds it because it's parked illegally but these things typically sit in storage for weeks if not months even after being impounded because they're not legally abandoned yet. This could be anywhere from 10-30 days in most places for vehicles but months or even years for bigger things like real estate.
Then how about both branches pass a bill, then override the veto. Guess what: will never happen, GOP needs the votes from their base that are more than willing to can them (and if it happens, Trump may even run third party and still win), Dems need the media to hold on to their votes for Beardo or Ms. Stalin.
I was about to say the same thing. Job dedication at any company would be 90%+ too if they paid 135% of industry wages nearly guaranteed for the rest of your life with limitless mobility within the company and some of the best benefits.
The government seems to "work" fine, everything essential is self-funding or exempt from shutdowns including many national and state parks. The bean counters and middle managers and a few millennial hipsters - things would function a lot better without all of them there.
A TON of people are not setting up their WiFi on those people, not because they care about data sharing but because they simply don't know how or understand why.
Many people in my family ask me to come hook up their Roku Stick when they just bought a TV with a Roku app built-in and in some cases they end up giving up completely when it involves buying and setting up another router or extender to get signal in their bedrooms.
Of the people that buy smart TV's, I wouldn't be surprised if many don't ever get setup correctly, hence why most come pre-loaded with ads even before you connect to the network.
The manufacturer probably on Verizon paid for by the manufacturer on an M2M plan.
Retails at about $5/MB (Looking at my MythTV logs, I could definitely extract about 30 days worth of very detailed viewing history in a single MB of compressed data) but if you go bulk, I've gotten an agreement for $15/month for 200 devices.
I don't think you've ever worked with carrier-grade 4G business services. You don't get full access. You get a few bps (much less than 56k) on a private circuit. Alarm systems, fleet tracking etc. GM has/had them in all their cars with OnStar whether or not you had the service active.
Most people would still go for the $1200 panel especially if it's "smart". You (singular) are not their market. They make some money off you and you end up opting out.
Most likely the dude got him and his family emigrated to America and in witness protection. Dreams come true - no longer living in the hole he came from, living in the US provided for by government funds.
That really depends. If you can compromise the browser or browser cache but nothing else, there is still value where you can modify DNS and/or root CA but still not record keystrokes and clicks (since some browsers *cough* Chrome *cough* now resolve independently from the OS/network).
Yes, a common education is. This is special (higher) education. Do you really think majoring in lesbian dance theory is a net benefit to society? Sure, STEM fields will "generally" be a net benefit but the majority of students across the board does not end up doing what they studied for and ends up being a drain to society.
Ultimately you'll be paying more for longer. Money doesn't grow on trees and regardless of their endowments, schools don't "make" a lot of money (typically they're not-for-profit) so in this case, the only way to make money is to saddle you up with high interest debt that you'll "eventually" pay off. Sure, no payments short term but long term, the interest compounds.
Price is typically reflective of the energy put into the product + greed (profit margins). Either they are making a killing over these (capitalist green washers) or it isn't a very energy efficient process. The fact there are now dozens of brands offering this same product in my supermarket well above triple the cost of ground beef means probably both, you can see the same effect in organic - still uses artificial pesticides, has much lower yields and a gullible market = double or triple as expensive as regular (also chemically organic) produce.
That test simply shot a projectile at a wing and has been widely discredited.
Sure it's going to do damage but it's not at all close to realistic. You need a wind tunnel and then simply drop the drone and see whether it will ever hit a wing. If a flock of birds could do as much damage, then we'd never get any planes of the ground.
It depends. If you're the size of LHC, tape makes sense because most of your tapes are at rest and thus consume nothing but the robot's power. If you need a small desktop-sized or 4U-sized tape robot, then space, electricity and speed indeed don't make sense.
Consumer NAND is only 4x the price. Professional-grade/enterprise SSD are still up there at 10-20x the cost of spinning rust. Even at 4x the price, you're still looking at an average investment of $1M vs $250k.
I've found that even 128GB is often not enough just to run a desktop. Windows 10 + updates + Microsoft Office + updates takes ~100G. Not sure how you can even sell a Win10 computer with 32GB since 30-40GB is Windows 10 alone and that can easily go beyond 40 or 50GB during updates.
All departments that are self-funding (receive income >= expenses) eare still open. Hence the government by definition only loses money from those departments.
The people of the USA voted for Trump which the wall was one of his key issues that got him voted in. We don't live in a country where the heckler's veto rules.
There's a lot more than gaming computers. Many, many businesses run on Intel and will not move away from it until AMD can implement the same instruction set. Yes AMD has a mostly compatible instruction set, but that doesn't mean everything about it is exactly the same, AMD is pretty opinionated when it comes to how to implement some things "better".
Way back when, IBM built a drop-in compatible 80486DX33 chip as well, but it wouldn't run WfW 3.11. AMD won't run with certain virtualization platforms, I don't think VMWare has Ryzen on it's list at all and there is a bunch of stuff out there, computationally optimized things, that are written to run on Intel and will run like sticky molasses on AMD, even when compiled from source.
It's a lot of inertia for AMD to overcome and historically, AMD has had these outliers for a few months/years (remember the hype around Opteron) but then totally shit the bed for years to come.
People in the industry know. Right now self-driving cars are an easy way to raise funds. Much like the .com era, everyone wants a piece of the pie. Eventually after about 20 years we'll laughing at the time we were awed by the self-driving car equivalent of Badger badger and lament the situation with Pewdiepie while everyone just uses self-driving cars to get delivery of hookers and blow.
There is less and less reason to keep driving around like fools every day for work. Cars, self driving or not, will feel that pressure as the next generation will demand more to flex home and work. So cars will once again become a thing for leisure and the powerful who will either be driven around by someone experienced or doing it themselves for the thrill of it.
Self-driving cars for the 'common folk' will be around but will be very simple automatons without all the high-tech gadgets driven in tandem with a skilled delivery driver much like today's truckers, taxi and UPS drivers.
Not 135% higher, 135% of (or 35% more)
$76,470 for average federal government wages vs $44,600 for average private sector wages - actually 42% although it's misleading because government workers don't make as much at the high ends (eg >250k) whereas private sector it isn't nearly as rare.
Explains all the leftists having to change gender (and literally invert their penis) then.
Depends on your jurisdiction. Just because a thing is sitting by itself, doesn't mean it's legally considered abandoned. You don't 'abandon' your car or motorcycle when you park it. If you take it before it's considered 'abandoned', it's called theft, the city impounds it because it's parked illegally but these things typically sit in storage for weeks if not months even after being impounded because they're not legally abandoned yet. This could be anywhere from 10-30 days in most places for vehicles but months or even years for bigger things like real estate.
Then how about both branches pass a bill, then override the veto. Guess what: will never happen, GOP needs the votes from their base that are more than willing to can them (and if it happens, Trump may even run third party and still win), Dems need the media to hold on to their votes for Beardo or Ms. Stalin.
I was about to say the same thing. Job dedication at any company would be 90%+ too if they paid 135% of industry wages nearly guaranteed for the rest of your life with limitless mobility within the company and some of the best benefits.
The government seems to "work" fine, everything essential is self-funding or exempt from shutdowns including many national and state parks. The bean counters and middle managers and a few millennial hipsters - things would function a lot better without all of them there.
A TON of people are not setting up their WiFi on those people, not because they care about data sharing but because they simply don't know how or understand why.
Many people in my family ask me to come hook up their Roku Stick when they just bought a TV with a Roku app built-in and in some cases they end up giving up completely when it involves buying and setting up another router or extender to get signal in their bedrooms.
Of the people that buy smart TV's, I wouldn't be surprised if many don't ever get setup correctly, hence why most come pre-loaded with ads even before you connect to the network.
The manufacturer probably on Verizon paid for by the manufacturer on an M2M plan.
Retails at about $5/MB (Looking at my MythTV logs, I could definitely extract about 30 days worth of very detailed viewing history in a single MB of compressed data) but if you go bulk, I've gotten an agreement for $15/month for 200 devices.
I don't think you've ever worked with carrier-grade 4G business services. You don't get full access. You get a few bps (much less than 56k) on a private circuit. Alarm systems, fleet tracking etc. GM has/had them in all their cars with OnStar whether or not you had the service active.
Install Linux? You can buy NEC and Samsung TV with Raspberry Pi modules.
How long until they just put in a 4G chip in each of them? It'll cost them $12/year per set in bulk.
Most people would still go for the $1200 panel especially if it's "smart". You (singular) are not their market. They make some money off you and you end up opting out.
Most likely the dude got him and his family emigrated to America and in witness protection. Dreams come true - no longer living in the hole he came from, living in the US provided for by government funds.
That really depends. If you can compromise the browser or browser cache but nothing else, there is still value where you can modify DNS and/or root CA but still not record keystrokes and clicks (since some browsers *cough* Chrome *cough* now resolve independently from the OS/network).
Yes, a common education is. This is special (higher) education. Do you really think majoring in lesbian dance theory is a net benefit to society? Sure, STEM fields will "generally" be a net benefit but the majority of students across the board does not end up doing what they studied for and ends up being a drain to society.
Ultimately you'll be paying more for longer. Money doesn't grow on trees and regardless of their endowments, schools don't "make" a lot of money (typically they're not-for-profit) so in this case, the only way to make money is to saddle you up with high interest debt that you'll "eventually" pay off. Sure, no payments short term but long term, the interest compounds.
Price is typically reflective of the energy put into the product + greed (profit margins). Either they are making a killing over these (capitalist green washers) or it isn't a very energy efficient process. The fact there are now dozens of brands offering this same product in my supermarket well above triple the cost of ground beef means probably both, you can see the same effect in organic - still uses artificial pesticides, has much lower yields and a gullible market = double or triple as expensive as regular (also chemically organic) produce.
That test simply shot a projectile at a wing and has been widely discredited.
Sure it's going to do damage but it's not at all close to realistic. You need a wind tunnel and then simply drop the drone and see whether it will ever hit a wing. If a flock of birds could do as much damage, then we'd never get any planes of the ground.
It depends. If you're the size of LHC, tape makes sense because most of your tapes are at rest and thus consume nothing but the robot's power. If you need a small desktop-sized or 4U-sized tape robot, then space, electricity and speed indeed don't make sense.
They'd also be enclosed in a metal box which is enclosed in a larger metal box, much more sealed than your microwave.
Consumer NAND is only 4x the price. Professional-grade/enterprise SSD are still up there at 10-20x the cost of spinning rust. Even at 4x the price, you're still looking at an average investment of $1M vs $250k.
I've found that even 128GB is often not enough just to run a desktop. Windows 10 + updates + Microsoft Office + updates takes ~100G. Not sure how you can even sell a Win10 computer with 32GB since 30-40GB is Windows 10 alone and that can easily go beyond 40 or 50GB during updates.