Yes. But an AC above me had stated that wikipedia was claiming it was currently in open beta. That is not true. unless it is hidden and disguised as a closed beta.
Korea isn't remotely closed network wise. They have just as much connectivity to the rest of the world as the rest of the world has to other parts. Korea has one of the highest(if not the highest) broadband penetration of any country out there including outside the capital. They have to go undersea cable everywhere because the only land mass attached to them is North Korea. That limits their bandwidth to outside countries, but its more than sufficient seeing as I can still pull 20000kbps down from Japan. The korean internet speaks the same language as all the other networks, TCP. The koreans have their own language, but so do the germans, so do the japanese, so do any of the other 170 some odd countries out there. I honestly have no idea at this point what your point is because you're making little sense.
Why? You can browse korean websites from outside Korea. North America experiences the same latency going to Asia or going to Europe. Europe experiences the same latency going to asia and going to the US.
The speed to Japan from Korean is still fairly decent (15000-20000 down) and I've pulled over 6000 down from some servers in the US.
When I mean it is self-contained I mean that Koreans have very little need to go outside their network because all the services they generally use are in country, while Canadians, Americans and Europeans (because of the English use) cross the borders more often. Living in Canada, Living in Korea and being a network engineer I think I have some clue what I'm talking about. Almost all modern LANs used by people (inside your work, your home, etc) use TCP. There is one person here who doesn't know what they're talking about. I'll give you a minute to think about who that is.
Because Koreans generally don't care about the "core networks of countries" across the internet. Their sites are all in country. While microsoft, and a few other big name brands might offer their website in Korean, they're not getting used that much. Koreans use Korean mail providers, korean websites, and korean services all provided in Korea.
In Korea I can get 60000-70000kbps down on speedtest depending.. outside korea it starts to drop off. Korea is a very self-contained internet, but its still the internet.
What use is it to have 1 Gig bandwidth to every house in the country?
You apparently haven't tried to use the internet in Korea after school gets out.
...violent,...
If all you watch is Korean movies you might get that impression. On a personal level Koreans are quite non-violent and most try to avoid confrontation.
Only in Korea. I can get 70000 to the local Seoul server on speedtest, but as soon as I leave the country it drops off significantly. It is one reason the Korean internet is so self-contained. Even going to japan cuts the speed by 2/3s, going to the US usually cuts it by 90%
Re:No good ideas come to mind....
on
Daemon
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· Score: 1
oh please. Untraceable makes The Net look like shakespeare. A first year network student would know how to disable a website permanently. Yet a whole organization can't manage it?
I've encountered these guys. The Film Noir article was especially bad. There were 2 or 3 there that guarded the page religiously. If anyone took issue with anything and tried to tag it, even with a fact (not a warning box) it was instantly reverted and they were told to take it to the talk page. After awhile enough editors finally showed up and told them to cut it out (one big issue was style for image captions) and I think one or two of them ended up eventually leaving the project in a huff.
Except there are plenty of times when you can know immediately that was just added is not necessary to the article. Just like a director can know right away that a particular take was crap.
Wikipedia was never meant to grow unending, never having anything taken away. You can't write well like that. Especially in a collaborative environment. If people just endlessly add things to articles with no real regard to whether or not its relevant, useful, sourced, etc. You end up with garbage. Good writing means things get taken away. That concept expands to the whole encyclopedia. It isn't a record of every thought and every hobby someone dreamed up, even though some people seem to think it should be. Just like articles are constantly edited for content, so is the encyclopedia.
They really forgot to include the fun in this game. As soon as you pin a couple walls you can draw boulders and lift the ball to any star no problem. Most of the interesting "tricks" they show you in a lot of levels depend on there being premade pins to drop stuff over, etc as trying to create your own breaks the "physics"
if it were me, I would insist on my 125 free minutes being run when no one else was using the service. its unlikely the university is going to be dropping insane money to provide massive bandwidth to students at sea, so half a dozen students or so online at once could really make those 125 minutes crawl.
I don't watch a lot of football to be honest. I don't know that I've ever watched a complete game in my life. I was asking that question from a technical stand point of making the video more informative.
In this instance the device is designed to eject itself after transmitting a short prayer in to the users ear.
Yes. But an AC above me had stated that wikipedia was claiming it was currently in open beta. That is not true. unless it is hidden and disguised as a closed beta.
Where I grew up we had a homeless guy who threw a bottle through a window every year on the first snow. The judge put him in jail until the spring.
it doesn't appear to be in open beta, the language on the site indicates its still in closed beta and only allowing people in as slots open up.
Korea isn't remotely closed network wise. They have just as much connectivity to the rest of the world as the rest of the world has to other parts. Korea has one of the highest(if not the highest) broadband penetration of any country out there including outside the capital. They have to go undersea cable everywhere because the only land mass attached to them is North Korea. That limits their bandwidth to outside countries, but its more than sufficient seeing as I can still pull 20000kbps down from Japan. The korean internet speaks the same language as all the other networks, TCP. The koreans have their own language, but so do the germans, so do the japanese, so do any of the other 170 some odd countries out there. I honestly have no idea at this point what your point is because you're making little sense.
Why? You can browse korean websites from outside Korea. North America experiences the same latency going to Asia or going to Europe. Europe experiences the same latency going to asia and going to the US.
The speed to Japan from Korean is still fairly decent (15000-20000 down) and I've pulled over 6000 down from some servers in the US.
When I mean it is self-contained I mean that Koreans have very little need to go outside their network because all the services they generally use are in country, while Canadians, Americans and Europeans (because of the English use) cross the borders more often. Living in Canada, Living in Korea and being a network engineer I think I have some clue what I'm talking about. Almost all modern LANs used by people (inside your work, your home, etc) use TCP. There is one person here who doesn't know what they're talking about. I'll give you a minute to think about who that is.
Because Koreans generally don't care about the "core networks of countries" across the internet. Their sites are all in country. While microsoft, and a few other big name brands might offer their website in Korean, they're not getting used that much. Koreans use Korean mail providers, korean websites, and korean services all provided in Korea.
In Korea I can get 60000-70000kbps down on speedtest depending.. outside korea it starts to drop off. Korea is a very self-contained internet, but its still the internet.
The Seoul server is screwy. I can get faster upload speeds to servers in Japan or the US than I can to the Seoul server.
You apparently haven't tried to use the internet in Korea after school gets out.
If all you watch is Korean movies you might get that impression. On a personal level Koreans are quite non-violent and most try to avoid confrontation.
Only in Korea. I can get 70000 to the local Seoul server on speedtest, but as soon as I leave the country it drops off significantly. It is one reason the Korean internet is so self-contained. Even going to japan cuts the speed by 2/3s, going to the US usually cuts it by 90%
always said that if you give them star trek names they'll work faster and better..
Those japanese will try anything to...
I can say "quack".
oh please. Untraceable makes The Net look like shakespeare. A first year network student would know how to disable a website permanently. Yet a whole organization can't manage it?
I've encountered these guys. The Film Noir article was especially bad. There were 2 or 3 there that guarded the page religiously. If anyone took issue with anything and tried to tag it, even with a fact (not a warning box) it was instantly reverted and they were told to take it to the talk page. After awhile enough editors finally showed up and told them to cut it out (one big issue was style for image captions) and I think one or two of them ended up eventually leaving the project in a huff.
Except there are plenty of times when you can know immediately that was just added is not necessary to the article. Just like a director can know right away that a particular take was crap.
Wikipedia was never meant to grow unending, never having anything taken away. You can't write well like that. Especially in a collaborative environment. If people just endlessly add things to articles with no real regard to whether or not its relevant, useful, sourced, etc. You end up with garbage. Good writing means things get taken away.
That concept expands to the whole encyclopedia. It isn't a record of every thought and every hobby someone dreamed up, even though some people seem to think it should be. Just like articles are constantly edited for content, so is the encyclopedia.
The next 3 years? you make it sound like the american war machine just relaxed after that...
They really forgot to include the fun in this game. As soon as you pin a couple walls you can draw boulders and lift the ball to any star no problem. Most of the interesting "tricks" they show you in a lot of levels depend on there being premade pins to drop stuff over, etc as trying to create your own breaks the "physics"
I think at this time we should all join hands and join in chorus of "America the free"...
if it were me, I would insist on my 125 free minutes being run when no one else was using the service. its unlikely the university is going to be dropping insane money to provide massive bandwidth to students at sea, so half a dozen students or so online at once could really make those 125 minutes crawl.
I'm going to guess their wedding vows and expectation of marriage which is what the donation was made under included a no-cheating clause...
When the donation is made under false pretenses.
I don't watch a lot of football to be honest. I don't know that I've ever watched a complete game in my life. I was asking that question from a technical stand point of making the video more informative.
its a 3:30 minute video...do you really need highlights of a 3:30 minute video?
I'd have liked to see actual examples of the colour failing to draw on certain surfaces, etc