100 third world sweat shop laborers are probably cheaper than 3 good software engineers - they just run mining operations on several accounts at a time.
My GX 260 never went down. They replaced the motherboard proactively - a tech came to my office and the whole process took ~ 15 minutes. It's still working today.
Put all your retirement savings into Apple, Google, and Microsoft. As you get closer to retirement you'll want to transition to day-trading options on these three companies.
Face it - we'd condemn Microsoft even if it actually did have HTML 6 support. The level of truthyness acceptable in advertising is a pretty low bar; consider "This is the famous Budweiser beer. We know of no brand produced by any other brewer which costs to much to brew and age..."
He was in Jita (the busiest trade hub) in a Kestral (small cheap ship that shouldn't draw much attention) when some miscreants saw that he had something of value in his hold and blew him up. They would have been blown up by the constabulary shortly thereafter. What is so EVE about this is that it was purposeless destruction for no actual gain.
He shouldn't need an escort in Jita and it wouldn't have done him any good anyway probably. My guess is that he was taking the plexes to low sec or 0.0 to sell for a profit or for his corpies.
The trick is to look at geo-coded images a year apart and diff the two images. Now use GIS software to overlay the tax-lot info for the places that received permits for the previous year (or so). You should be able to relatively quickly find properties that have had significant exterior work done without a permit.
That being said, neighbors seem to be very efficient at ratting each other out for anything larger that a birdbath without a permit.
I know some municipalities have banned / tried-to-ban BBQ grills from the balconies of apartment buildings. A fire on a wood balcony in a multi-story apartment building is a bad thing.
XBill is one of my favorites. They went into minutiae about winblows game over the years and had one page to talk about the games that commonly come with Linux. I was glad to see Trek - it was the first game I ever played on a computer.
I'm pretty sure that Dell's are assembled by contractors in China. All the major assemblies are built there and it costs roughly the same amount to ship an assembled computer as it does to ship an empty case.
I have a good friend that was on the Intel product team that was supporting Dell when the Bad caps problem hit the GX260's. Those guys were located in Hillsborough, OR and had long conference calls with Dell engineers.
TFA is and abstract to a paper and some links. He's generating his synthetic aperture by moving the radar head on a rail (modified garage door opener style). I was curious how he went about getting the necessary motion.
Maybe a Volt DB with a PostgreSQL data warehouse. Stonebreaker has been behind quite a number of RDBMS's - Ingress, Postgress (spun off Ingress), sybase, MS SQL Server (evolved from Sybase), Informix, and now volt. I don't know that the list is even complete.
The GPU is still separate from the CPU - its just located on the same chip. The idea is that you save power by having the interconnect on the chip level rather than having a high speed backplane on the circuit board. This also reduces board complexity. This is a win for small ultraportable devices - more than desktop computers. I could also see a use for micro ATX home media boxen.
I'm pretty sure there are places on the Dalton Highway where handy plug-ins might be a little scarcer than they bargained for. Headlights are mandatory 24/7/365 and road surface is quite rough - not going to get 248 miles per charge here.
They are starting July 8th so the temperatures will well above zero. Most of the trip should be 60's and 70's (degrees F) - roughly room temp for the Celsius inclined.
Whats even crazier is that some of these chips will end up in the desktops of the pointy-haired and their chosen minions because they feel that "Big Penis" CPUs will reflect better business practice. Intel sells a huge number of chips at a premium price to corporations when cheaper AMD CPUs would do the same job.
100 third world sweat shop laborers are probably cheaper than 3 good software engineers - they just run mining operations on several accounts at a time.
My GX 260 never went down. They replaced the motherboard proactively - a tech came to my office and the whole process took ~ 15 minutes. It's still working today.
Still being used by school districts throughout the land with no budget for a Xerox.
Am I right my assumption that there may be as many as 8 volumes of Volume 4?
Given the subject matter it will be more like 4! / 3
So when does Myth get 3D Blue Ray Support?
Put all your retirement savings into Apple, Google, and Microsoft. As you get closer to retirement you'll want to transition to day-trading options on these three companies.
Face it - we'd condemn Microsoft even if it actually did have HTML 6 support. The level of truthyness acceptable in advertising is a pretty low bar; consider "This is the famous Budweiser beer. We know of no brand produced by any other brewer which costs to much to brew and age..."
Don't take it personally; it doesn't like anyone.
Lets say the dimensions of your structure are 16 x 12.5. Assuming 8 ft walls - thats 456 ft^2 or 5 bags of insulation(R19) at $38.75 each
http://www.homedepot.com/Building-Materials-Insulation-Fiberglass/h_d1/N-5yc1vZ1xh8Zbay7/R-100320353/h_d2/ProductDisplay?langId=-1&storeId=10051&catalogId=10053
and (assume 30 degree slope to roof) 230 ft^2 of R38 - so 4 bags of insulation at 62.08 - you're out of Home Depot for $450
He shouldn't need an escort in Jita and it wouldn't have done him any good anyway probably. My guess is that he was taking the plexes to low sec or 0.0 to sell for a profit or for his corpies.
Civ CIV - I wonder if they'll keep Sid Meier's frozen head around long enough to see that?
The trick is to look at geo-coded images a year apart and diff the two images. Now use GIS software to overlay the tax-lot info for the places that received permits for the previous year (or so). You should be able to relatively quickly find properties that have had significant exterior work done without a permit. That being said, neighbors seem to be very efficient at ratting each other out for anything larger that a birdbath without a permit.
I know some municipalities have banned / tried-to-ban BBQ grills from the balconies of apartment buildings. A fire on a wood balcony in a multi-story apartment building is a bad thing.
They went into minutiae about winblows
You sound like a fucking idiot and a fanboy when you say that, and no one will ever take seriously anything you say after it.
And you sound like a Nazi. I see you don't have the balls spew your bile with your own fucking name.
XBill is one of my favorites. They went into minutiae about winblows game over the years and had one page to talk about the games that commonly come with Linux. I was glad to see Trek - it was the first game I ever played on a computer.
No that's Morgan Freeman - he only played God in the movies.
I'm pretty sure that Dell's are assembled by contractors in China. All the major assemblies are built there and it costs roughly the same amount to ship an assembled computer as it does to ship an empty case. I have a good friend that was on the Intel product team that was supporting Dell when the Bad caps problem hit the GX260's. Those guys were located in Hillsborough, OR and had long conference calls with Dell engineers.
TFA is and abstract to a paper and some links. He's generating his synthetic aperture by moving the radar head on a rail (modified garage door opener style). I was curious how he went about getting the necessary motion.
Maybe a Volt DB with a PostgreSQL data warehouse. Stonebreaker has been behind quite a number of RDBMS's - Ingress, Postgress (spun off Ingress), sybase, MS SQL Server (evolved from Sybase), Informix, and now volt. I don't know that the list is even complete.
Its also bloat ware. We need bloat ware in the most basic operating software in our systems!
Small devices that have both a CPU and a display with a limited power supply and circuit board real-estate comes immediately to mind.
The GPU is still separate from the CPU - its just located on the same chip. The idea is that you save power by having the interconnect on the chip level rather than having a high speed backplane on the circuit board. This also reduces board complexity. This is a win for small ultraportable devices - more than desktop computers. I could also see a use for micro ATX home media boxen.
I'm pretty sure there are places on the Dalton Highway where handy plug-ins might be a little scarcer than they bargained for. Headlights are mandatory 24/7/365 and road surface is quite rough - not going to get 248 miles per charge here. They are starting July 8th so the temperatures will well above zero. Most of the trip should be 60's and 70's (degrees F) - roughly room temp for the Celsius inclined.
These mother boards will handle two 12 core Opterons: http://www.newegg.com/Product/ProductList.aspx?Submit=ENE&N=2010200302%201071357038&name=Dual%20Socket%20G34
Whats even crazier is that some of these chips will end up in the desktops of the pointy-haired and their chosen minions because they feel that "Big Penis" CPUs will reflect better business practice. Intel sells a huge number of chips at a premium price to corporations when cheaper AMD CPUs would do the same job.