I used to use their "notebook" mice on my PC. They only lasted a year or so so I bought a stock of them when they were in the bargain bins. I've got none left now though.
places where those cleaning processes donâ(TM)t get to.
In the UK NHS one of the things theyâ(TM)ve done to stop this is to urge consultants not to wear ordinary ties, because ties are rarely washed but they are regularly handled. It turns out that a consultantâ(TM)s tie is one of the most likely reservoirs for persistent hospital infections.
Here's a nickel, kid, go get yourself a proper keyboard...
If an Asteroid decides to come this way then we can't do much about it.
A few colonists on Mars won't make any difference - they'll be dependent on Earth to resupply them with stuff even if they're making their own water and potatoes.
If we never accomplish interstellar travel, then in 5 billion years we die with our Sun's expansion
Correct, but even 1 thousand more years of living at the current rate of destruction isn't going to work out either so that's not much of a concern.
The Chinese gang who own most Bitcoins can afford to buy back a few at inflated prices to make you think it's "recovering", yes.
I used to use their "notebook" mice on my PC. They only lasted a year or so so I bought a stock of them when they were in the bargain bins. I've got none left now though.
Microsoft have made some good mice.
Yep. Because new reactors just appear out of nowhere, they don't need building.
Nobody's bothered developing a reactor that uses 3He because there isn't much of it here on Earth.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
If we can figure out a way to get lots of it from the moon then maybe somebody might think it's worth trying to develop one.
places where those cleaning processes donâ(TM)t get to.
In the UK NHS one of the things theyâ(TM)ve done to stop this is to urge consultants not to wear ordinary ties, because ties are rarely washed but they are regularly handled. It turns out that a consultantâ(TM)s tie is one of the most likely reservoirs for persistent hospital infections.
Here's a nickel, kid, go get yourself a proper keyboard...
Full credit to Microsoft though, they used to be Ten-a-Penny.
(And before that they were free: Outlook used to simply execute any code that arrived in your inbox)
Meanwhile: Windows exploits are still only worth $2.
Nowhere on earth has the latency or the bandwidth for this.
Or the massive number of machines that would be needed to do the rendering.
Has there been a single case of that occurring? Or just reports of pilots seeing drones?
Yes. Many.
https://arstechnica.com/tech-p...
https://sanfrancisco.cbslocal....
PS: Can't they just shoot the drone or something?
Fingers crossed. Let's hope the people proposing this own one of those little books of litmus paper.
Ummm.... no.
Why bother with a virus scan if you're going to format? Did nobody explain even the basic concepts to you?
I'm amazed at how they still haven't managed to load antivirus software before the viruses.
It's what, 2018 now?
(and also amazed that Windows "safe" mode still loads everything in the "run at startup" registry key... safe or otherwise)
The universe is all just one big chemical reaction that started at the Big Bang, including your "thoughts".
What makes you believe you can change the course of the universe more than an asteroid? Do you have more free will than the rock?
If the whole room is at ambient temperature you can simply hold up a sheet and walk past one.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?...
A suit made of this would do the same thing.
The only time it would fail is if there was something hot in the room and you walked in front of it.
Why is an intermediate binary format less secure than an ASCII format?
"Since NameTests displayed their user’s personal data in javascript file"
WTF does that even mean. Javascript cannot save files.
It can't save file on the local machine but it can certainly scrape a web page and send the contents to a server.
Or maybe it means they did:
document.write("Joe Sixpack");
And this info was scraped by another script.
The whole point of this tech is that it's switchable between isolating and radiating mode.
At a single button you can basically transform it....
This will be perfect for burglars trying to get past PIR sensors.
(and freedom-protecting government agents, obviously)
Grammar Nazis, keeping us on the straightened arrow.
If an Asteroid decides to come this way then we can't do much about it.
A few colonists on Mars won't make any difference - they'll be dependent on Earth to resupply them with stuff even if they're making their own water and potatoes.
If we never accomplish interstellar travel, then in 5 billion years we die with our Sun's expansion
Correct, but even 1 thousand more years of living at the current rate of destruction isn't going to work out either so that's not much of a concern.
"starfaring" may be impossible in practice.
Should we move to Mars? It will be very expensive and mostly pointless.
How about we spend all that money looking after the place where conditions are suitable and we know we can survive?
I did not say it was good.
You said it was " the biggest advance in audio reproduction technology is(sic) 50 years"
Key word: "advance"
"Brakes", the word you're trying to use is "brakes".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
Hush! You're talking back to a "smart" person.
Then convert them to a binary-encoded format for compactness and faster parsing.
Who cares about Microsoft?
Every computer seller in the entire world...?