Something is definitely funky - other browsers run at 10-15% when playing the same stream. In the past I've regularly seen it run at 100% (i.e. flatlining a core) when doing much of anything, but especially while receiving data. Been trimming ad-ons in the past to figure out if any of them is messing with it.
2 articles, 1 can be fully read and indexed by Google, the other only 1-2 sentences. Google will make the former more available, simply because of the content.
It goes back further than that even. I remember some games that prompted you to enter "word x on page y" of the manual, which was printed on red paper to foil the photocopiers of those days. It was always nice if one could find a pirated copy somewhere so you wouldn't have to enter a word from the manual every time you started the game.
I got annoyed at one of the SSL games, think Curse of the Azure Bonds or something, where you had to use a wheel to make a word appear based on 2 symbols - made a copy of the game-disc, went in and edited all instances of the words to the same one, just so I could play the damn thing.
Of course, all of them also had half the dialogue/story bits written in a booklet, so you still had to go look stuff up....
Is it social engineering or does Denmark want only the wealthy to drive? It would help reduce traffic and improve parking if the pesky peons aren't allowed on the roads.
Outside of inner-Copenhagen, by far most families have a car, and many have 2. The number of cars on the road is rising (or was last I looked at it.) But many also choose to take their bike or public transport, which may be the case due to car-ownership being expensive or for the latter because of a semi-decent public transport infrastructure (except is the poorest and more remote parts of the country).
It's logically not possible for one country representing a small fraction of the world's population to prop the rest of the world up. It's a nice idea, it just doesn't match reality. To quote one of my favorite songs by RUSH, "You can twist perception but reality won't budge."
Ignoring the whole, "The US aren't paying anywhere near the repeatedly-quoted amount", it IS possible for those just-under-5%-of-the-world's-population to be directly responsible for 16% of the pollution causing the problems that now require significant funds to address.
You mean the small "country" of Europe, where it was readily available via Jolla's online store? Or India, where Intex sold a Sailfish device named Aqua Fish? Or whatever country Amazon.com covers, since a quick googling says the latter is available there (might be trolls) ?
Look, I get it, you're sad you missed out on getting one, or perhaps live in a country too hostile for Jolla to release their product in, but if it was released, with 3 different devices running SailfishOS, 2 of which were generally available (Jolla C was limited), calling it vaporware is a biiiit of a stretch.
If you know any nerds, perhaps get a Sony Experia phone, and install SailfishOS on it? Dunno how far along it is, but apparently it's a thing : https://jolla.com/wp-content/u...
The BREXIT will basically change nothing for the rest of the EU, I doubt we even bother to remove it from the list of official languages to translate legislative texts into.
....did anyone suggest that that would happen? I mean, if it's translated to Irish Gaelic, perhaps some of the people in Ireland would be OK though I suspect not all, and the Maltese would prolly still complain. Did you instead mean to remove it from the list of official Working Languages?
Note: EU currently doesn't translate legislative texts to Irish Gaelic for some reason Note 2: Apparently more people speak Polish in Ireland, than speak Irish Gaelic Note 3: German or Russian would prolly get you some ways with people from Slovenia or Serbia
Who cares when it releases on obscure channel in a single country - Proper question is, when does it release world-wide on Netflix?
Is this really so surprising? I know quite a few physicists (and some armchair physicists) who have long believed the standard model to be incomplete.
If you know any that thinks otherwise, don't consult them for anything related to physics.
If they had any sense, they'd just make an Atari-branded Steam Machine.
This is precisely what I'm expecting - a PC with something like Steam, nicely packaged up, and with a pile of old games in an emulator.
Something is definitely funky - other browsers run at 10-15% when playing the same stream.
In the past I've regularly seen it run at 100% (i.e. flatlining a core) when doing much of anything, but especially while receiving data. Been trimming ad-ons in the past to figure out if any of them is messing with it.
The stream in question was/is the E3 2017 livestream from YT : https://gaming.youtube.com/e3
Noticed the change - Firefox now uses more than 500% cpu to play a YouTube video.
Dunno if this helps you : http://www.scalzi.com/whatever...
hmm... Now you're making me ponder if I should book someone to come on and talk Ethereum, incl "vs Bitcoin" ...
Either I'm completely not understand the public-ledger part of bitcoin et al, or this isn't anonymous at all.
No, they were talking about programming in the .NET language, it's structure, how to define classes, methods etc ...
Studying CS, one group went to an exam on a paper about how .NET is a programming language and never mentioned C#.
They passed, and when asked about it, the teachers said there was no difference.
Should be easy enough to find out "whats so cutting edge about the X35" - it became the JSF.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...
See: Brave (browser)
https://brave.com/
2 articles, 1 can be fully read and indexed by Google, the other only 1-2 sentences.
Google will make the former more available, simply because of the content.
It goes back further than that even. I remember some games that prompted you to enter "word x on page y" of the manual, which was printed on red paper to foil the photocopiers of those days. It was always nice if one could find a pirated copy somewhere so you wouldn't have to enter a word from the manual every time you started the game.
I got annoyed at one of the SSL games, think Curse of the Azure Bonds or something, where you had to use a wheel to make a word appear based on 2 symbols - made a copy of the game-disc, went in and edited all instances of the words to the same one, just so I could play the damn thing.
Of course, all of them also had half the dialogue/story bits written in a booklet, so you still had to go look stuff up....
Well, this is what you Americans get when you support barely restrained capitalism.
You should embrace a little more socialism.
Socialism would get in the way of poor Americans becoming rich.
Is it social engineering or does Denmark want only the wealthy to drive? It would help reduce traffic and improve parking if the pesky peons aren't allowed on the roads.
Outside of inner-Copenhagen, by far most families have a car, and many have 2. The number of cars on the road is rising (or was last I looked at it.)
But many also choose to take their bike or public transport, which may be the case due to car-ownership being expensive or for the latter because of a semi-decent public transport infrastructure (except is the poorest and more remote parts of the country).
It's logically not possible for one country representing a small fraction of the world's population to prop the rest of the world up. It's a nice idea, it just doesn't match reality. To quote one of my favorite songs by RUSH, "You can twist perception but reality won't budge."
Ignoring the whole, "The US aren't paying anywhere near the repeatedly-quoted amount", it IS possible for those just-under-5%-of-the-world's-population to be directly responsible for 16% of the pollution causing the problems that now require significant funds to address.
Not seen a self-checkout kiosk that accepted cash
You mean the small "country" of Europe, where it was readily available via Jolla's online store? Or India, where Intex sold a Sailfish device named Aqua Fish? Or whatever country Amazon.com covers, since a quick googling says the latter is available there (might be trolls) ?
Look, I get it, you're sad you missed out on getting one, or perhaps live in a country too hostile for Jolla to release their product in, but if it was released, with 3 different devices running SailfishOS, 2 of which were generally available (Jolla C was limited), calling it vaporware is a biiiit of a stretch.
If you know any nerds, perhaps get a Sony Experia phone, and install SailfishOS on it? Dunno how far along it is, but apparently it's a thing : https://jolla.com/wp-content/u...
Shit, you're telling my phone is vaporware? ...explains why no-one calls :(
Every time I see these, I reply: Tried Jolla?
Tip to a beggar?
Get rid of beggars.
Might be wrong, but was told from a few sources that handing cash/goods to a beggar is illegal in China.
Odd fact: Due to Bayer's trademark, there's a lot of countries where you cannot buy "Aspirin". Some of them even have access to Slashdot.
heaps of us hear
That's a new one...
Because I had to look it up: Aspirin is acetylsalicylic acid
The BREXIT will basically change nothing for the rest of the EU, I doubt we even bother to remove it from the list of official languages to translate legislative texts into.
....did anyone suggest that that would happen?
I mean, if it's translated to Irish Gaelic, perhaps some of the people in Ireland would be OK though I suspect not all, and the Maltese would prolly still complain.
Did you instead mean to remove it from the list of official Working Languages?
Note: EU currently doesn't translate legislative texts to Irish Gaelic for some reason
Note 2: Apparently more people speak Polish in Ireland, than speak Irish Gaelic
Note 3: German or Russian would prolly get you some ways with people from Slovenia or Serbia