In the last century, the Democrats were the party behind Jim Crow laws, and the Republicans were behind Prohibition of alcohol, which one do you think has changed the most?
Just like the Obama administration hasn't said a peep about T-mobile? If you pretend this is a partisan issue you allow it to continue. This is a campaign finance issue, AT&T donates to Republicans, Democrats, even Independents. http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000076
If a disease outbreak ravages the country and kills the young, the old, the weak, that would be a huge tragedy.
If a virus ravages the country and kills off Windows XP, Adobe Flash, and IIS, then the strong will have survived and the software world will be a better place.
I do my own support on my desktop at home, but ATI and Creative and Logitech et cetera still let me download *DRIVERS*.
There's a difference between not providing phone support and completely orphaning a product.
If you click on the lines he describes the accuracy of each cable. Some of them are pulled directly from GIS data and are probably accurate down to a few meters.
When the tools cost thousands of dollars it becomes a large barrier to entry for beginners and small shops.
This group is trying to demonstrate that there is an alternative (other than piracy). Also, with increased adoption most open source software generally becomes far superior to commercial alternatives. Apache, Linux, nmap, there are tons of examples. Maybe with a few thousand more users and developers these publishing tools will become the benchmark.
There are riders in the MotoGP championship who are asking not to have a race in Japan this year because of radiation fears. This is how retarded people can be, they are afraid of radiation from Fukushima which has killed no one as far as I know, but they won't blink at going 200+ miles per hour on a 230 horsepower motorcycle with titanium rods holding their bones together from the last race. Nuclear power is so many orders of magnitude safer than driving a car, smoking, eating red meat, pretty much anything else we do on a daily basis that the fear of it is pretty analogous to the fear of ghosts in my eyes. It's purely based on ignorance.
They're making a new solid state laser which will be the most powerful solid state laser to date. The really high powered lasers used in industry and by the military are chemical lasers. It's really not that difficult to understand.
My understanding is that the EU uses spectrum auctions and has fragmented frequency blocks like we do, they're just spread across more competing companies.
With the M&A activity in the wireless sector it increasingly like the wireline sector did decades ago. When that monopoly was broken up and more carriers were allowed to set up shop long distance prices dropped from around.25 to.05 per minute within the decade and hundreds of regional and national carriers popped up.
Wireless would be even easier to break up since there is no physical base of millions of miles of copper to divide up. The FCC would just need to lower the barriers to entry. Unfortunately too many politicians are already in the pockets of the big two end-game wireless providers, and too many people like yourself think that the answer is to give more power to those bought and paid for politicians by adding more regulation.
Open up spectrum so that smaller telecoms and bigger non-telecoms (Google Towers?) could easily launch a network and it certainly would.
Competition is the reason that other companies have better mobile infrastructure, not regulation.
Nobody really overclocks low-end hardware like this, but if you did at least you'd only need a single waterblock or heatsink.
You'd get much more bang for your buck spending the money you would have spent on cooling and spending it on a faster CPU+Discrete Graphics combo.
The only reason to overclock one of these would be shits and/or giggles.
The quote you quoted states that 'tweaking' the frequency to be less than or greater than 60hz is expensive and takes a lot of effort, precisely because all the existing hardware is built to stay as close as possible to that nominal frequency.
Nextel used IDEN which is not GSM. It uses SIM cards, but it is an incompatible standard.
I believe he means to lease a dedicated circuit. Too many wireless stories have confused Slashdot readers about how telecom works.
It's from the dutch 'Manikin' actually, meaning 'little man'.
The democrats didn't change.
In the last century, the Democrats were the party behind Jim Crow laws, and the Republicans were behind Prohibition of alcohol, which one do you think has changed the most?
No, small amounts of aluminum mesh.
Just like the Obama administration hasn't said a peep about T-mobile? If you pretend this is a partisan issue you allow it to continue. This is a campaign finance issue, AT&T donates to Republicans, Democrats, even Independents. http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/summary.php?id=D000000076
When one person throws a brick through another persons shop window, they're already turned against each other.
Sounds more like they're trying to stop competing with Dell and start competing with IBM, reversing a Fiorina era trend.
They don't, the computers used to configure the controllers do. This is a standard Siemens system they are using, it's not just Iran.
Just because it doesn't have a place in your mom's basement, doesn't mean it's not important tech.
If a disease outbreak ravages the country and kills the young, the old, the weak, that would be a huge tragedy.
If a virus ravages the country and kills off Windows XP, Adobe Flash, and IIS, then the strong will have survived and the software world will be a better place.
I do my own support on my desktop at home, but ATI and Creative and Logitech et cetera still let me download *DRIVERS*.
There's a difference between not providing phone support and completely orphaning a product.
When I was a kid, if someone was called a 'pussy' it meant that they were a boy acting like a girl, and that acting like a girl was bad
Sounds like you may be the misogynist.
But that's not the current standard, they might as well reference 5.25" floppy discs if they are trying to inflate their breakthrough.
Is that you, Kim Jong Il?
If you click on the lines he describes the accuracy of each cable.
Some of them are pulled directly from GIS data and are probably accurate down to a few meters.
When the tools cost thousands of dollars it becomes a large barrier to entry for beginners and small shops.
This group is trying to demonstrate that there is an alternative (other than piracy). Also, with increased adoption most open source software generally becomes far superior to commercial alternatives. Apache, Linux, nmap, there are tons of examples. Maybe with a few thousand more users and developers these publishing tools will become the benchmark.
There are riders in the MotoGP championship who are asking not to have a race in Japan this year because of radiation fears. This is how retarded people can be, they are afraid of radiation from Fukushima which has killed no one as far as I know, but they won't blink at going 200+ miles per hour on a 230 horsepower motorcycle with titanium rods holding their bones together from the last race.
Nuclear power is so many orders of magnitude safer than driving a car, smoking, eating red meat, pretty much anything else we do on a daily basis that the fear of it is pretty analogous to the fear of ghosts in my eyes. It's purely based on ignorance.
There are plenty of people terrified of nuclear power, and there are plenty of people terrified of ghosts, for the same basic reasons.
Lumber grows on trees.
They're making a new solid state laser which will be the most powerful solid state laser to date.
The really high powered lasers used in industry and by the military are chemical lasers.
It's really not that difficult to understand.
My understanding is that the EU uses spectrum auctions and has fragmented frequency blocks like we do, they're just spread across more competing companies. .25 to .05 per minute within the decade and hundreds of regional and national carriers popped up.
With the M&A activity in the wireless sector it increasingly like the wireline sector did decades ago.
When that monopoly was broken up and more carriers were allowed to set up shop long distance prices dropped from around
Wireless would be even easier to break up since there is no physical base of millions of miles of copper to divide up. The FCC would just need to lower the barriers to entry. Unfortunately too many politicians are already in the pockets of the big two end-game wireless providers, and too many people like yourself think that the answer is to give more power to those bought and paid for politicians by adding more regulation.
Open up spectrum so that smaller telecoms and bigger non-telecoms (Google Towers?) could easily launch a network and it certainly would.
Competition is the reason that other companies have better mobile infrastructure, not regulation.
Nobody really overclocks low-end hardware like this, but if you did at least you'd only need a single waterblock or heatsink.
You'd get much more bang for your buck spending the money you would have spent on cooling and spending it on a faster CPU+Discrete Graphics combo.
The only reason to overclock one of these would be shits and/or giggles.
The quote you quoted states that 'tweaking' the frequency to be less than or greater than 60hz is expensive and takes a lot of effort, precisely because all the existing hardware is built to stay as close as possible to that nominal frequency.