Yes, we've migrated, but it doesn't run on the server. It's used to run gulp which precompiles our LESS files to CSS, minifies the CSS and JS, makes bundles out of them, and optimizes our images. I wouldn't actually run the thing on a server, but it's great as a development build chain.
Mine does as well, and it also has turn by turn directions in it, which I find one if it's most useful features. It's not a map, but just simply a bar that indicates how far until the next turn and the direction of the turn. It is really nice in the suburbs where intersections can be fairly close together.
I think I had this conversation with Grim Reefer before as well, and I have a 2014 corvette stingray.
You do realize how silly what you just said is, right?
Again, it is not how much data you consume over a lengthy period of time
...
it's literally a measure of how many bits are flowing the split **second** you are using it.
So you are arguing that they shouldn't be able to measure it per month because that is measuring data per month and month is a length of time, but they should be measuring it per second.. which second is a length of time. LOL.
And
For Comcast to be honest they should say: Hey, we give you 1Mbps down guaranteed, 10Mbps burstable.
How about up to 10Mbps? Oh wait, that is what they say.
I agree that it is a poor metric to be billing on. They really should separate out the data on how much bandwidth you use during peak hours from how much you during non-peak hours. I think that would go a long way towards curbing peak usage unnecessarily. All of a sudden that steam download of a 50Gb triple-A title can wait to download at 3am if it means saving a few dollars for a lot of people rather than starting at 7pm.
Correction. Comcast has defined caps in ALL markets, however, only in a select few trial areas have they actually been enforcing them. I'm currently in one of the areas not in the so called trials, but I do have a cap -- they just don't squat about it if it I exceed it (which I do every month). The 1TB cap I can almost live under.
That isn't true in Illinois. In Illinois, your drivers license is valid for 4 years up until you are 80. Then it's valid for 2 years up until you are 86. After 86, it's only valid for one year.
I'm paying $80 per month ($79.95) to Comcast for 75/10. I'd love gigabit here, which they supposedly offer for $300/month, $300 sign up, and a two year contract with hefty early termination fees. I say supposedly because they will accept the order then call you back in a month to let you know that they don't really offer it in your area, then refund your money.
A better solution is just to bake all the advertising and trackers right into the browser itself so that it doesn't need to keep redownloading it for every site.
Same here. I've just about phased out the 3TB Seagates (The ST3000DM001 variety). Had absolutely horrible fail rates with that model. In fact, I have a class action notice sitting on my counter regarding that particular model as well. They were so bad that even when they would fail within the 1 year warranty period I refused to send them back. I just replaced them as they failed. I believe 1 single drive now remains.
While #4 is true, you've stated it in such a way that it is very misleading. Other establishments did and still continue to sell coffee at the same or higher temperatures, even today. In fact since McDonalds, other major vendors of coffee, including Chick-Fil-A, Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts, Wendy's, Burger King, hospitals, and McDonald's (again) have been defendants in hot coffee cases. I (personally) would consider the above to constitute a fairly large portion of the major prepared coffee sellers and the jury got that fact completely wrong. Even back when this was happening, the LA Times did a quick survey and found that it was typical for coffee to be sold at those temperatures.
It was a skylake i7-6700k ($350), 16GB of DDR4 ram ($109), GA-Z170X-GAMING GT ($249), Corsair H90 ($105), Samsung 950 PRO 512GB ($298) = $1,111. I reused the case/powersupply/video card. I wouldn't need a video card for myself because the built-in video card is fine for office use (programming/server).
My gaming PC is a different one. i7-3930k, 64GB ram, 2 Samsung SSDs in a RAID-0, and a 980. (and a LSI 9280-16i4e with 12 3TB drives in a RAID-6) in which I run my games from a RamDisk, so the NVMe SSDs wouldn't help.
Still, the difference between a PC that is set up for RAID NVMe and not is minor, especially with the 950 PRO 512GB now selling for under $300. You can get 2 or 3 256GB's cheap.
What do I do? Well, I run a RAID-0 of SSD for my OS. I drop both the failing drive and a new drive into my drive duplicator, hit a button, and approximately 5 minutes later I put the new drive into the box and it's running again. That is of course if SMART detects it before failure which is ~50% of the time. Otherwise I wipe and restore from backups.... I'm guessing about 2-3 hours as I haven't had to do it yet.
It is probably your accent because siri works great for me. Just tried it and got it first try, just to be sure.
$200k per year in taxes when you make $20k per year? Lol. GTO.
Yes, we've migrated, but it doesn't run on the server. It's used to run gulp which precompiles our LESS files to CSS, minifies the CSS and JS, makes bundles out of them, and optimizes our images. I wouldn't actually run the thing on a server, but it's great as a development build chain.
Then feel free to fine your local businesses for whatever law you dream up.
And?
Google is trying to call .com a global only search result, but that is disingenuous and appealing to tech illiterate users
No, google is **correctly** claiming that google.com is a US based search result, and your EU laws can go pound sand.
Mine does as well, and it also has turn by turn directions in it, which I find one if it's most useful features. It's not a map, but just simply a bar that indicates how far until the next turn and the direction of the turn. It is really nice in the suburbs where intersections can be fairly close together.
I think I had this conversation with Grim Reefer before as well, and I have a 2014 corvette stingray.
You do realize how silly what you just said is, right?
Again, it is not how much data you consume over a lengthy period of time
...
it's literally a measure of how many bits are flowing the split **second** you are using it.
So you are arguing that they shouldn't be able to measure it per month because that is measuring data per month and month is a length of time, but they should be measuring it per second.. which second is a length of time. LOL.
And
For Comcast to be honest they should say: Hey, we give you 1Mbps down guaranteed, 10Mbps burstable.
How about up to 10Mbps? Oh wait, that is what they say.
I agree that it is a poor metric to be billing on. They really should separate out the data on how much bandwidth you use during peak hours from how much you during non-peak hours. I think that would go a long way towards curbing peak usage unnecessarily. All of a sudden that steam download of a 50Gb triple-A title can wait to download at 3am if it means saving a few dollars for a lot of people rather than starting at 7pm.
Going here: https://customer.xfinity.com/M... tells me:
"927GB used Note: Enforcement of the 250GB data consumption threshold is currently suspended."
Correction. Comcast has defined caps in ALL markets, however, only in a select few trial areas have they actually been enforcing them. I'm currently in one of the areas not in the so called trials, but I do have a cap -- they just don't squat about it if it I exceed it (which I do every month). The 1TB cap I can almost live under.
That isn't true in Illinois. In Illinois, your drivers license is valid for 4 years up until you are 80. Then it's valid for 2 years up until you are 86. After 86, it's only valid for one year.
That's great, but tau is double pi (6.28...) not half pi (1.57...).
I'm paying $80 per month ($79.95) to Comcast for 75/10. I'd love gigabit here, which they supposedly offer for $300/month, $300 sign up, and a two year contract with hefty early termination fees. I say supposedly because they will accept the order then call you back in a month to let you know that they don't really offer it in your area, then refund your money.
Which country was it? Mexico or Canada?
Anyone who was in law enforcement or the military in 1942 is in their 90's at least.
Use the windows 8/8.1 drivers. That's exactly what lexmark tells you to do.
OK. http://codepen.io/anon/pen/yOO...
A better solution is just to bake all the advertising and trackers right into the browser itself so that it doesn't need to keep redownloading it for every site.
Same here. I've just about phased out the 3TB Seagates (The ST3000DM001 variety). Had absolutely horrible fail rates with that model. In fact, I have a class action notice sitting on my counter regarding that particular model as well. They were so bad that even when they would fail within the 1 year warranty period I refused to send them back. I just replaced them as they failed. I believe 1 single drive now remains.
While #4 is true, you've stated it in such a way that it is very misleading. Other establishments did and still continue to sell coffee at the same or higher temperatures, even today. In fact since McDonalds, other major vendors of coffee, including Chick-Fil-A, Starbucks, Dunkin' Donuts, Wendy's, Burger King, hospitals, and McDonald's (again) have been defendants in hot coffee cases. I (personally) would consider the above to constitute a fairly large portion of the major prepared coffee sellers and the jury got that fact completely wrong. Even back when this was happening, the LA Times did a quick survey and found that it was typical for coffee to be sold at those temperatures.
Sure. That'll be ~$300. I can burn that.
And is why it's a RAID-6 and not a RAID-5. I've had a second disk fail during rebuilds twice so far.
It was a skylake i7-6700k ($350), 16GB of DDR4 ram ($109), GA-Z170X-GAMING GT ($249), Corsair H90 ($105), Samsung 950 PRO 512GB ($298) = $1,111. I reused the case/powersupply/video card. I wouldn't need a video card for myself because the built-in video card is fine for office use (programming/server).
My gaming PC is a different one. i7-3930k, 64GB ram, 2 Samsung SSDs in a RAID-0, and a 980. (and a LSI 9280-16i4e with 12 3TB drives in a RAID-6) in which I run my games from a RamDisk, so the NVMe SSDs wouldn't help.
Still, the difference between a PC that is set up for RAID NVMe and not is minor, especially with the 950 PRO 512GB now selling for under $300. You can get 2 or 3 256GB's cheap.
What do I do? Well, I run a RAID-0 of SSD for my OS. I drop both the failing drive and a new drive into my drive duplicator, hit a button, and approximately 5 minutes later I put the new drive into the box and it's running again. That is of course if SMART detects it before failure which is ~50% of the time. Otherwise I wipe and restore from backups.... I'm guessing about 2-3 hours as I haven't had to do it yet.