That is kind of silly. I can't haul lumber, nor would I take it on a dirt road for 60 miles at 4am either, and it's not an EV. If I want to haul lumber, I drive to the local Menards or Home Depot, and rent their truck for an hour for $10 to haul that stuff.
Of course, there aren't any 60 mile dirt roads anywhere remotely near me, so I guess I've never had to deal with that problem.
As for hauling kids, they do make SUV EVs you know.
Also, if they are grouping all the different model Iphones together, doesn't Toyota, Michael Jackson, etc get to group all of their similar products under one count as Apple got to?
Why yes, they should, oh wait, they did that already. They didn't list the 1997 and 1998 Toyota Camrys separately. They combined all the model years.
If by completely silent, you mean put it in the EULA, create blog entries, knowledge base articles, and at least half a dozen web pages about it, then I guess so. What would it take to not be completely silent in your eyes?
I am going to assume that you are new to programming, because claiming that most software cannot benefit from parallel processing is hilariously false. It's just most programmers can't do it, or do it well that is the issue. Almost all software today can benefit from parallel processing, it's just a matter of how much, and if it is worth the expense of actually getting a programmer who can do it rather than throwing 10 code monkeys in a room to bang out barely functional code.
In the US it is quite common to pass in the outside lane because they don't enforce the laws that require drivers in the inside lane to move out of it. So people constantly drive slow in the inner lanes oblivious to the fact that it is both illegal and creating dangerous driving scenarios around them. It is so common here in Chicago that I would say a good 30-35% of the time that I can travel faster in the outer most lane than the inner most lane no matter the time of day. Sad but true.
The government is great at spending money. If they think they can create a new special division and spend tax dollars, they will figure out a way to stick their nose into it regardless of it is right, or will improve anything.
While this crash killed only the driver, it points out that sophisticated AI is not yet to the point of recognizing all the risks involved in driving, and the AI alone is a danger to everyone else on the road.
Considering that there have been less accidents per driven mile with autopilot than the average driver, the same thing could be said about humans but worse. The government should be looking into how to reduce traffic accidents, which coincidentally REQUIRING all drivers to use autopilot would do.
Perhaps the trailer needed to take a different path, or use a GPS that would navigate them around a turn that they would be legally required to wait for hours at.
What leads you to believe that the millennials are getting screwed the hardest? Of all the age groups, I would say they get hit the least hard, right after retirees.
Not sure what you mean. The stats clearly show that the #1 version of Windows installed is Windows 10 (64-bit), which is what I said -- at 40.01%. The next closest is Windows 7 (64-bit) at 34.09%, and then Windows 8.1 (64-bit) at 12.46%.
As for which very large companies are already rolling out Windows 10, I don't think I should. I'm not sure if they care if others know or not, but I'm not wanting to find out from their legal departments that they do. I could say that one of them is one of the largest advertising agencies in the world, and other is a state government agency.
That is odd, because I know two very large companies are in the midst of rolling out Windows 10, as well my the company I am currently consulting for. As for gamers, well according to steam, Windows 10 passed by Windows 7/8/8.1 long ago.
Actually according to NADA (National Automobile Dealers Association), modern cars has more than 10,000 moving parts. We aren't talking about your model car.
That is kind of silly. I can't haul lumber, nor would I take it on a dirt road for 60 miles at 4am either, and it's not an EV. If I want to haul lumber, I drive to the local Menards or Home Depot, and rent their truck for an hour for $10 to haul that stuff.
Of course, there aren't any 60 mile dirt roads anywhere remotely near me, so I guess I've never had to deal with that problem.
As for hauling kids, they do make SUV EVs you know.
As good as a diesel in trying to cheat to actually pass emissions? Or is that in cost per mile?
Here you go. $7.99: https://www.amazon.com/Bluetoo...
Or buy a $10 device that streams bluetooth to a headphone jack for both vehicles if your stereo isn't bluetooth capable.
Why yes, my desktop has 64GB of RAM in it, and it's not even a server let alone an enterprise server.
Also, if they are grouping all the different model Iphones together, doesn't Toyota, Michael Jackson, etc get to group all of their similar products under one count as Apple got to?
Why yes, they should, oh wait, they did that already. They didn't list the 1997 and 1998 Toyota Camrys separately. They combined all the model years.
Stop trying to dismiss terrifying news articles by using common sense.
No. It uses a standard, well known encryption algorithm - specifically https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... as stated here https://lastpass.com/how-it-wo... so the encryption technique isn't security by obscurity. That took a total of 10 minutes to find out, and that isn't what was broken.
Yes. There is this new thing called google which will help you find it.
If by completely silent, you mean put it in the EULA, create blog entries, knowledge base articles, and at least half a dozen web pages about it, then I guess so. What would it take to not be completely silent in your eyes?
No, but I can tell you that it can do 0.402336km in under 987 deciseconds.
I am going to assume that you are new to programming, because claiming that most software cannot benefit from parallel processing is hilariously false. It's just most programmers can't do it, or do it well that is the issue. Almost all software today can benefit from parallel processing, it's just a matter of how much, and if it is worth the expense of actually getting a programmer who can do it rather than throwing 10 code monkeys in a room to bang out barely functional code.
$1500 a month in rent isn't high.
In the US it is quite common to pass in the outside lane because they don't enforce the laws that require drivers in the inside lane to move out of it. So people constantly drive slow in the inner lanes oblivious to the fact that it is both illegal and creating dangerous driving scenarios around them. It is so common here in Chicago that I would say a good 30-35% of the time that I can travel faster in the outer most lane than the inner most lane no matter the time of day. Sad but true.
The government is great at spending money. If they think they can create a new special division and spend tax dollars, they will figure out a way to stick their nose into it regardless of it is right, or will improve anything.
While this crash killed only the driver, it points out that sophisticated AI is not yet to the point of recognizing all the risks involved in driving, and the AI alone is a danger to everyone else on the road.
Considering that there have been less accidents per driven mile with autopilot than the average driver, the same thing could be said about humans but worse. The government should be looking into how to reduce traffic accidents, which coincidentally REQUIRING all drivers to use autopilot would do.
Perhaps the trailer needed to take a different path, or use a GPS that would navigate them around a turn that they would be legally required to wait for hours at.
Oh, and if you don't happen to have a car stereo with a line in because it's so old, here you go: https://www.amazon.com/Audio-C...
I'm sure if you can afford the $700 iPhone, you should have no problem paying for the $25 new adpater, or find one for $3 on ebay.
Here you go: https://www.amazon.com/GOgroov...
I've trademarked spaces, please stop.
What leads you to believe that the millennials are getting screwed the hardest? Of all the age groups, I would say they get hit the least hard, right after retirees.
Not much of an exaggeration. Mine has 19.
Not sure what you mean. The stats clearly show that the #1 version of Windows installed is Windows 10 (64-bit), which is what I said -- at 40.01%. The next closest is Windows 7 (64-bit) at 34.09%, and then Windows 8.1 (64-bit) at 12.46%.
As for which very large companies are already rolling out Windows 10, I don't think I should. I'm not sure if they care if others know or not, but I'm not wanting to find out from their legal departments that they do. I could say that one of them is one of the largest advertising agencies in the world, and other is a state government agency.
That is odd, because I know two very large companies are in the midst of rolling out Windows 10, as well my the company I am currently consulting for. As for gamers, well according to steam, Windows 10 passed by Windows 7/8/8.1 long ago.
http://store.steampowered.com/...
Actually according to NADA (National Automobile Dealers Association), modern cars has more than 10,000 moving parts. We aren't talking about your model car.