Even if you ignore the thermally conductive epoxies somebody else mentioned, simple.
Before you resin-pot the boards, you put a water-cooling heat exchanger on the chip and pipe the coolant to a radiator outside the epoxy block. Or if the thermal profile is low enough, you can do it with passive heat pipes like those inside my laptop.
Either figure out how to disable the Windows Update service starter or find the reg keys that are set in Pro or Enterprise and import them. MS won't have written an entirely different update program for Home, just hidden the buttons and check boxes.
I've met a couple of the chaps working on the South African SKA site, very interesting characters to say the least.
One of the things that stuck in my mind was how sensitve the receivers are, if they unpack them and a cell phone is on in the direction of the receiver horn, they'll blow the circuits instantly.
They also have controlled perimeters where phones are locked away and even airplane transponders are switched off before they cross the perimeter. Ridiculously sensitive stuff.
Given the lack, so far, of impact craters, the argument can be made that Pluto has cleared its orbit of other material and therefore does qualify as a planet under the IAU definition.
Looks like we get hit more often than Pluto does if the images released so far are representative of the rest of the surface.
They're allowing the filming of a movie about Rockstar with Daniel Radcliffe playing Sam Houser and they want to stop a documentary that's probably going to be a bit more honest? Good luck with that.
They are not currents because the water isn't flowing, it is moving in place, albeit a 500m range.
Waves in all definitions are movements within a fluid where the particles move back and forward around a fixed point. The dictionary definition is inaccurate by stating that the disturbance is at the surface, the movement happens through the body of water. It is visible at the surface, but it takes place in the body.
If you read the court filing, you'll discover that MS has identified the keys as being stolen from their supply chain and of being the wrong type of OEM key that a computer shop should be using.
And as for the publication of the IP address, that was declared in the court documents as required.
The very interesting factoid from this is how did people steal keys from MS's supply chain, especially non-issued license keys. Sounds like an inside job.
You can say that. But when you link another day to that date, as the idiot did by posting 4/16 on 4/28 and then state, "Just a warning", then there is a valid risk that you might be aware of, or planning, events like those that happened on 4/16 that will be enacted on 4/29.
And if the police ignored this because "free speech has no limits" and there was another attack, how much shit would they be in?
Well, it could be named after an obscure material in a computer game. An in-joke for those who know it.
Or it could be named after the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, or after the Redstone missile built there by von Braun and which was the base for Alan Shepard and Gus Grissom's flights into space.
SA Breweries had a major issue with beer trucks going up steep hills in sections of South Africa. Some of these trucks end up going at walking pace and the people living in the areas would walk alongside, jump aboard and pass beer crates down. They solved it partially by sticking armed guards on the top of the truck during slow hill climbs.
There is a continuum of behaviour in play here. Most people would be unlikely to proceed with stealing cargo if killing someone was required. That's why having a bloke leaning against the van when you're unloading it keeps the yobbos from running off with your cargo.
Add a firearm to the bloke and you block another section of people who'd try threats and low to mid-end violence from taking the risk in the first place.
The sense of what is right might encompass nicking a crate of beer off an unattended van, but not hurting someone to do it. And I'd suspect that group is much, much larger than the group who would kill someone over it.
We already expose them to enough math to trigger those who have the aptitude. As for your other examples, by the Gods, those are absolute evils, especially the violin.
Joking aside, why not give them a similar level of exposure to the concepts of programming as we already to for math? It certainly beats some of the soft crap like "Life Skills" that gets pushed into the curricula.
All schools should be offering this as a mandatory program because of that tiny percentage with the real aptitude. If you don't expose the kids to the concepts and let the kids discover whether they do have the aptitude, you will only get a percentage of that tiny percentage self-adopting programming.
If only one out of ten schools offers the opportunity, and I'll hazard a guess that most of the nine that don't offer it service poorer areas, then you're definitely got kids who have the mental mindset, but do not have the exposure. It may sound cliche, but if you can double the tiny percentage...
Non-statistically valid statistic. If my school didn't have teachers interested in computer programming in the 80s and 90s, I would not have discovered my vocation in time to do anything about it.
Oil use for paint, plastics, fertilizers, asphalt are all okay as far as atmospheric CO2 is concerned. The carbon is still bound up in non-CO2 form and is unlikely to be released as such.
It's only the burning of oil in engines that contributes to the CO2 buildup and we should be aiming at controlling that, not shutting oil down completely.
It's a tribal prove-you-are-a-man thing in South Africa. A lot has been done to make sure the process is clean and safe, but some of the witch doctors refuse to accept the oversight and do the circumcision with a rusty razor blade in non-sterile conditions.
It's stupid and dangerous, and although the offending witch doctors are getting jail time, not enough is being done to regulate the process to the point that the need for these transplants is eliminated at source.
No weaker than Alien 3 and certainly miles ahead of Resurrection.
The scientists in Resurrection take the prize for absolute idiots, unlike the prospectors in Prometheus, they had no excuse for their poor scientific techniques. They knew what the aliens were like and they still failed to take proper precautions for containment and disposal.
It may not be perfection, and connecting one spinal cord to another might not even match up the nerves, but there is progress being made. And we might get a complete repair treatment out of this.
Run for the hills, the FSM has arrived and is hammering the world with his angry, red noodly appendages.
Even if you ignore the thermally conductive epoxies somebody else mentioned, simple.
Before you resin-pot the boards, you put a water-cooling heat exchanger on the chip and pipe the coolant to a radiator outside the epoxy block. Or if the thermal profile is low enough, you can do it with passive heat pipes like those inside my laptop.
Either figure out how to disable the Windows Update service starter or find the reg keys that are set in Pro or Enterprise and import them. MS won't have written an entirely different update program for Home, just hidden the buttons and check boxes.
I've met a couple of the chaps working on the South African SKA site, very interesting characters to say the least.
One of the things that stuck in my mind was how sensitve the receivers are, if they unpack them and a cell phone is on in the direction of the receiver horn, they'll blow the circuits instantly.
They also have controlled perimeters where phones are locked away and even airplane transponders are switched off before they cross the perimeter. Ridiculously sensitive stuff.
Given the lack, so far, of impact craters, the argument can be made that Pluto has cleared its orbit of other material and therefore does qualify as a planet under the IAU definition.
Looks like we get hit more often than Pluto does if the images released so far are representative of the rest of the surface.
The domain is player.ooyala.com. And it doesn't start playing by itself.
Oops. That'll teach one to actually read the article. Or the summary. And to actually comprehend what one is reading.
They're allowing the filming of a movie about Rockstar with Daniel Radcliffe playing Sam Houser and they want to stop a documentary that's probably going to be a bit more honest? Good luck with that.
They are not currents because the water isn't flowing, it is moving in place, albeit a 500m range.
Waves in all definitions are movements within a fluid where the particles move back and forward around a fixed point. The dictionary definition is inaccurate by stating that the disturbance is at the surface, the movement happens through the body of water. It is visible at the surface, but it takes place in the body.
If you read the court filing, you'll discover that MS has identified the keys as being stolen from their supply chain and of being the wrong type of OEM key that a computer shop should be using.
And as for the publication of the IP address, that was declared in the court documents as required.
The very interesting factoid from this is how did people steal keys from MS's supply chain, especially non-issued license keys. Sounds like an inside job.
You can say that. But when you link another day to that date, as the idiot did by posting 4/16 on 4/28 and then state, "Just a warning", then there is a valid risk that you might be aware of, or planning, events like those that happened on 4/16 that will be enacted on 4/29.
And if the police ignored this because "free speech has no limits" and there was another attack, how much shit would they be in?
Java already has this in place. Can be difficult getting unsigned code running on Java 8 in default configuration.
Well, it could be named after an obscure material in a computer game. An in-joke for those who know it.
Or it could be named after the Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, or after the Redstone missile built there by von Braun and which was the base for Alan Shepard and Gus Grissom's flights into space.
Guess we'll never know.
SA Breweries had a major issue with beer trucks going up steep hills in sections of South Africa. Some of these trucks end up going at walking pace and the people living in the areas would walk alongside, jump aboard and pass beer crates down. They solved it partially by sticking armed guards on the top of the truck during slow hill climbs.
There is a continuum of behaviour in play here. Most people would be unlikely to proceed with stealing cargo if killing someone was required. That's why having a bloke leaning against the van when you're unloading it keeps the yobbos from running off with your cargo.
Add a firearm to the bloke and you block another section of people who'd try threats and low to mid-end violence from taking the risk in the first place.
The sense of what is right might encompass nicking a crate of beer off an unattended van, but not hurting someone to do it. And I'd suspect that group is much, much larger than the group who would kill someone over it.
We already expose them to enough math to trigger those who have the aptitude. As for your other examples, by the Gods, those are absolute evils, especially the violin.
Joking aside, why not give them a similar level of exposure to the concepts of programming as we already to for math? It certainly beats some of the soft crap like "Life Skills" that gets pushed into the curricula.
All schools should be offering this as a mandatory program because of that tiny percentage with the real aptitude. If you don't expose the kids to the concepts and let the kids discover whether they do have the aptitude, you will only get a percentage of that tiny percentage self-adopting programming.
If only one out of ten schools offers the opportunity, and I'll hazard a guess that most of the nine that don't offer it service poorer areas, then you're definitely got kids who have the mental mindset, but do not have the exposure. It may sound cliche, but if you can double the tiny percentage...
Non-statistically valid statistic. If my school didn't have teachers interested in computer programming in the 80s and 90s, I would not have discovered my vocation in time to do anything about it.
Oil use for paint, plastics, fertilizers, asphalt are all okay as far as atmospheric CO2 is concerned. The carbon is still bound up in non-CO2 form and is unlikely to be released as such.
It's only the burning of oil in engines that contributes to the CO2 buildup and we should be aiming at controlling that, not shutting oil down completely.
It's a tribal prove-you-are-a-man thing in South Africa. A lot has been done to make sure the process is clean and safe, but some of the witch doctors refuse to accept the oversight and do the circumcision with a rusty razor blade in non-sterile conditions.
It's stupid and dangerous, and although the offending witch doctors are getting jail time, not enough is being done to regulate the process to the point that the need for these transplants is eliminated at source.
No weaker than Alien 3 and certainly miles ahead of Resurrection.
The scientists in Resurrection take the prize for absolute idiots, unlike the prospectors in Prometheus, they had no excuse for their poor scientific techniques. They knew what the aliens were like and they still failed to take proper precautions for containment and disposal.
Prometheus rocked.
We are able to at least partially repair severed spinal cords now. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/284152.php. That's a lot further along than a couple of years ago.
It may not be perfection, and connecting one spinal cord to another might not even match up the nerves, but there is progress being made. And we might get a complete repair treatment out of this.
We are able to at least partially repair them now. http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/284152.php. That's a lot further along than a couple of years ago.
Can't you keep them occupied by coming up with better ways to remove dead whales than dynamite?
*tips hat*