most memory cards can be used directly by microntrollers with built-in SPI communication. Even just an arduino can give the access. Not to make it fast, but when you're hunting for a "fun" use case, that won't matter; you can still over-build it.
Neckbeard tears are highly toxic, you'd never decontaminate their hoard.
I'd just take them to the local tech recycling nonprofit in an unmarked bag, and just don't even mention where they came from. They probably have neckbeards that attempt to volunteer in exchange for free computers, especially before they learn that the volunteering needed is all manual labor. So they have to already have some precautions; they'll be able to contain any outbreaks. So don't worry. Just don't tell them, they don't want to work that hard.
It doesn't matter when the original thing you did wrong was. When you do something a little bit naughty, but you use international banking systems to do, it might be felony fraud in any of the countries whose banks you used. And when you have a group of people doing something naughty together as a group, and even flying to a foreign country to move money around, yeah, only idiots on the internet care that original thing would have only been a little bit naughty if one person was doing it. None of the people whose opinions matter (lawyers, judges, diplomats) care about that, they care about the more-bad parts that were named.
You can't find the story because my frank synopsis doesn't match the propaganda of either side. You'd have to actually read the stories that report on the negotiations between the two countries about troop levels, over a period of 10 years, to understand it. Afghanistan has similar issues, too, but they can't get as much ongoing assistance because they don't cooperate well enough. (e.g., too many of their soldiers turn out to be enemies)
Regarding the unanswered questions, one was flamebait, and the other was whataboutism.
They aren't deep. The chambers are mostly flooded, but they're not pressurized, and it isn't completely full all the way.
The rock is mostly limestone, so the air doesn't pressurize, and the chambers aren't all completely full. So depth isn't an issue here; a few meters. The problem is more the narrowness of the passages.
Hmm... could you possibly put them in tight, streamlined, snag-resistant "cocoons" that prevent put them moving, drug them into a state of artificial calm, and simply tow them out as inert cargo?
Sure, but the lead time to develop, manufacture, and safety test it is about 3 years. The water will likely drain out naturally in less than 3 months.
If their lives were in imminent danger, sure, maybe get some plastic wrap and give it a try, but since that isn't the case, probably not.
5 hours, but the whole thing isn't flooded to the top of the cave; the passages between chambers are totally flooded, but it would probably be less than an hour at a time under water.
But teaching them to swim and use SCUBA gear gives them something to do, and a positive focus.
But surely even you can comprehend that they're making a whole boatload of revenue, with a pretty normal business model that leads to big profits after they stop making huge capital investments to build factories... right?
If all you ever do is "pump," and you never "dump," what is the problem? Your complaint is that he tries to make his company look good, or make the stock look like a good buy? You thought that was bad? What?
You don't seem to understand the situations where the word "pump" is used in relation to securities.
Their lives are not in urgent danger. They've been located, and none of them have serious injuries or problematic medical conditions. They can't pump all the water out of the caves to let them walk out, but they can pump out enough water to keep them safe where they are. They can bring food in.
One alternative they're considering is to just leave them there for a few months; obviously an unpleasant choice, but perhaps not the biggest challenge they'll face in their lives. It is their comfort, and the comfort of their parents, that they're working to save now.
ARM doesn't make chips, they aren't involved in fabrication, and their designs don't even include peripherals like I/O or memory or anything.
The story is about ARM providing logic compilers so that other companies can design the products that Samsung will manufacture. They will also provide some IP blocks that assist in connecting high performance peripherals.
ARM has nothing at all to do with the part about increased clock speeds. Don't expect headlines or summaries to capture actual events in the world.
But yes, Samsung is all about faster clock speeds; they're investing $2B in just one part of the tech, for bleep's sake!
That isn't the news here. Samsung already makes chips, and they're incrementally faster, same as chips from other fabs.
The news here is that they're teaming up with ARM and ARM is going to provide a bunch of logic compilers and IP blocks that are used to connect other IP blocks together. Remember, ARM chip designs don't come with peripherals; they're just the CPU. Their customers design the rest of the chip. So this deal also will bring some other ARM IP blocks to the Samsung offering.
Expect most of the chips that eventually get manufactured using the technologies in this story to have some other company's name on the silkscreen. And if you try to choose Qualcomm for that use case you'll find out how much slower it is to customize! You'll be bribing them for years just to get into negotiations, because that isn't their business model.
Just because you didn't read the reporting about what charges he faces, doesn't mean that whatever your friends told you about it must be true.
They have websites on the internet where they link to news stories, it is probably possible to find out what he's charged with.
Extraditions are always pretty quick, because as the NZ court explained, they're not trials! The purpose is to check the paperwork, and compare it to the treaty. That's it. Fighting extradition is an expensive delay tactic with no chance of eventual success.
Prosecutions aren't even put forwards by companies in the US. You can look this stuff up, if you're curious. Or don't if you're not. But there is no reason to just internalize a bunch of horseshit as if it is knowledge.
The haters have their panties bunched so tight, they won't comprehend that the fraud and related conspiracy charges are what bring all the jail time, once they start bleeting about copyright they can't receive any new inputs until they get distracted and switch to a new topic.
Even after he's years into his sentence, they'll still think he's in jail for copyright, because knowing how to read and being able to do it in a way that increases knowledge are not the same thing.
Iraq won't let the US leave. That's why. They insist they still need security assistance, they're not willing to force their troops fight by themselves, and they aren't able to maintain control of their land without constant warfare.
Their fat asses were present in the US to withdraw the money in furtherance of their conspiracy, money that they were receiving for actions that violate US law.
If the horseshit you ate in your echo chamber was higher quality, you'd know that. People mislead you by pointing at the servers, why? Because the location of the servers isn't relevant to the case. That's why they gave you that information; because it's not relevant. Gee, why would they do that? If you understood you'd be less credulous of what your friends tell you.
It is true that if they had gone and done it in a place where it was legal, they wouldn't be arrested. But they didn't do it all in a place like that; parts of it they did in the US.
They're accused of literally transferring money to the US, transferring it between each using the US banking system, and traveling in person to the US to take actions involving this money.
Everything they're accused of happened in the US. Maybe you spend too much time on reddit, but nothing about this story involves the US caring about where the network data was routed.
Maybe distros are happier without slowflake neckbeards as users? Maybe their use cases don't rank very high.
Maybe the stories of woe they tell would turn out to be total bullshit and they don't know how SysV works either. Maybe they flood the user forums of these distros with fake complaints, and people from the distros have spent the time to look into these horrible-sounding bugs only to find out, they're not bugs, they're not even misfeatures, the users just don't understand how the features they turned on work. They clicked shit, or typed shit, without checking what it does and didn't have enough knowledge to understand it once they broke it; and then it turns out, they didn't even have a use case for fucking with any of it. That's the sort of people who hate systemd loudly. That and old sysadmins who think they shouldn't have to read anymore because they read manuals in their 20s.
I suffered under SysV for years, it was the best of the crufty *nix. Good news, my old init scripts work just fine under systemd, but golly, the new stuff works better. I don't want to go back to that crap. It's like with AIX; it took IBM a decade of effort to get their DB2 clients to switch to linux. Clients refused to change, even though it sucked. IBM knew it sucked, because sysadmins using it needed a lot of help. IBM likes selling support contracts, but they don't want you to need to call them for support every day. So the same sysadmins that liked to call and have IBM hold their hands while they fixed something were the ones that didn't want to switch to a better OS that requires futzing. Now those same people are mad because ten years later, linux made changes and they had to learn something new again. Waa, waa, waa.
most memory cards can be used directly by microntrollers with built-in SPI communication. Even just an arduino can give the access. Not to make it fast, but when you're hunting for a "fun" use case, that won't matter; you can still over-build it.
Neckbeard tears are highly toxic, you'd never decontaminate their hoard.
I'd just take them to the local tech recycling nonprofit in an unmarked bag, and just don't even mention where they came from. They probably have neckbeards that attempt to volunteer in exchange for free computers, especially before they learn that the volunteering needed is all manual labor. So they have to already have some precautions; they'll be able to contain any outbreaks. So don't worry. Just don't tell them, they don't want to work that hard.
It doesn't matter when the original thing you did wrong was. When you do something a little bit naughty, but you use international banking systems to do, it might be felony fraud in any of the countries whose banks you used. And when you have a group of people doing something naughty together as a group, and even flying to a foreign country to move money around, yeah, only idiots on the internet care that original thing would have only been a little bit naughty if one person was doing it. None of the people whose opinions matter (lawyers, judges, diplomats) care about that, they care about the more-bad parts that were named.
You can't find the story because my frank synopsis doesn't match the propaganda of either side. You'd have to actually read the stories that report on the negotiations between the two countries about troop levels, over a period of 10 years, to understand it. Afghanistan has similar issues, too, but they can't get as much ongoing assistance because they don't cooperate well enough. (e.g., too many of their soldiers turn out to be enemies)
Regarding the unanswered questions, one was flamebait, and the other was whataboutism.
They aren't deep. The chambers are mostly flooded, but they're not pressurized, and it isn't completely full all the way.
The rock is mostly limestone, so the air doesn't pressurize, and the chambers aren't all completely full. So depth isn't an issue here; a few meters. The problem is more the narrowness of the passages.
Or even Niagara, if your barrel still floats.
People should stick to safer hobbies, like going over Niagra Falls in a barrel.
Hmm... could you possibly put them in tight, streamlined, snag-resistant "cocoons" that prevent put them moving, drug them into a state of artificial calm, and simply tow them out as inert cargo?
Sure, but the lead time to develop, manufacture, and safety test it is about 3 years. The water will likely drain out naturally in less than 3 months.
If their lives were in imminent danger, sure, maybe get some plastic wrap and give it a try, but since that isn't the case, probably not.
5 hours, but the whole thing isn't flooded to the top of the cave; the passages between chambers are totally flooded, but it would probably be less than an hour at a time under water.
But teaching them to swim and use SCUBA gear gives them something to do, and a positive focus.
I always thought that the whole paid shill thing was just a joke meme.
Others things to look into now that you've made it to the surface: fresh-baked pizza, real flowers, and sunshine.
But surely even you can comprehend that they're making a whole boatload of revenue, with a pretty normal business model that leads to big profits after they stop making huge capital investments to build factories... right?
If all you ever do is "pump," and you never "dump," what is the problem? Your complaint is that he tries to make his company look good, or make the stock look like a good buy? You thought that was bad? What?
You don't seem to understand the situations where the word "pump" is used in relation to securities.
Their lives are not in urgent danger. They've been located, and none of them have serious injuries or problematic medical conditions. They can't pump all the water out of the caves to let them walk out, but they can pump out enough water to keep them safe where they are. They can bring food in.
One alternative they're considering is to just leave them there for a few months; obviously an unpleasant choice, but perhaps not the biggest challenge they'll face in their lives. It is their comfort, and the comfort of their parents, that they're working to save now.
ARM doesn't make chips, they aren't involved in fabrication, and their designs don't even include peripherals like I/O or memory or anything.
The story is about ARM providing logic compilers so that other companies can design the products that Samsung will manufacture. They will also provide some IP blocks that assist in connecting high performance peripherals.
ARM has nothing at all to do with the part about increased clock speeds. Don't expect headlines or summaries to capture actual events in the world.
But yes, Samsung is all about faster clock speeds; they're investing $2B in just one part of the tech, for bleep's sake!
That isn't the news here. Samsung already makes chips, and they're incrementally faster, same as chips from other fabs.
The news here is that they're teaming up with ARM and ARM is going to provide a bunch of logic compilers and IP blocks that are used to connect other IP blocks together. Remember, ARM chip designs don't come with peripherals; they're just the CPU. Their customers design the rest of the chip. So this deal also will bring some other ARM IP blocks to the Samsung offering.
Expect most of the chips that eventually get manufactured using the technologies in this story to have some other company's name on the silkscreen. And if you try to choose Qualcomm for that use case you'll find out how much slower it is to customize! You'll be bribing them for years just to get into negotiations, because that isn't their business model.
They're a UK vassal. UK is merely friends with the US.
I don't care what your opinions are, but will you please upgrade your basic knowledge so that you can do better analysis?
I know I should side with Kim.
Just because you hear the echo, doesn't mean you're supposed to believe it. Golly.
Just because you didn't read the reporting about what charges he faces, doesn't mean that whatever your friends told you about it must be true.
They have websites on the internet where they link to news stories, it is probably possible to find out what he's charged with.
Extraditions are always pretty quick, because as the NZ court explained, they're not trials! The purpose is to check the paperwork, and compare it to the treaty. That's it. Fighting extradition is an expensive delay tactic with no chance of eventual success.
Prosecutions aren't even put forwards by companies in the US. You can look this stuff up, if you're curious. Or don't if you're not. But there is no reason to just internalize a bunch of horseshit as if it is knowledge.
He's too big to smuggle onto a boat, though. It isn't like he's going to kayak out to a yacht and slip away, they'd have to load at some sort of dock.
A Hutt never flees, they always shelter in place.
The haters have their panties bunched so tight, they won't comprehend that the fraud and related conspiracy charges are what bring all the jail time, once they start bleeting about copyright they can't receive any new inputs until they get distracted and switch to a new topic.
Even after he's years into his sentence, they'll still think he's in jail for copyright, because knowing how to read and being able to do it in a way that increases knowledge are not the same thing.
Iraq won't let the US leave. That's why. They insist they still need security assistance, they're not willing to force their troops fight by themselves, and they aren't able to maintain control of their land without constant warfare.
Their fat asses were present in the US to withdraw the money in furtherance of their conspiracy, money that they were receiving for actions that violate US law.
If the horseshit you ate in your echo chamber was higher quality, you'd know that. People mislead you by pointing at the servers, why? Because the location of the servers isn't relevant to the case. That's why they gave you that information; because it's not relevant. Gee, why would they do that? If you understood you'd be less credulous of what your friends tell you.
It is true that if they had gone and done it in a place where it was legal, they wouldn't be arrested. But they didn't do it all in a place like that; parts of it they did in the US.
They're accused of literally transferring money to the US, transferring it between each using the US banking system, and traveling in person to the US to take actions involving this money.
Everything they're accused of happened in the US. Maybe you spend too much time on reddit, but nothing about this story involves the US caring about where the network data was routed.
It's pretty cool looking too. And who wants exploding tomatoes, or hearing loss?
Maybe distros are happier without slowflake neckbeards as users? Maybe their use cases don't rank very high.
Maybe the stories of woe they tell would turn out to be total bullshit and they don't know how SysV works either. Maybe they flood the user forums of these distros with fake complaints, and people from the distros have spent the time to look into these horrible-sounding bugs only to find out, they're not bugs, they're not even misfeatures, the users just don't understand how the features they turned on work. They clicked shit, or typed shit, without checking what it does and didn't have enough knowledge to understand it once they broke it; and then it turns out, they didn't even have a use case for fucking with any of it. That's the sort of people who hate systemd loudly. That and old sysadmins who think they shouldn't have to read anymore because they read manuals in their 20s.
I suffered under SysV for years, it was the best of the crufty *nix. Good news, my old init scripts work just fine under systemd, but golly, the new stuff works better. I don't want to go back to that crap. It's like with AIX; it took IBM a decade of effort to get their DB2 clients to switch to linux. Clients refused to change, even though it sucked. IBM knew it sucked, because sysadmins using it needed a lot of help. IBM likes selling support contracts, but they don't want you to need to call them for support every day. So the same sysadmins that liked to call and have IBM hold their hands while they fixed something were the ones that didn't want to switch to a better OS that requires futzing. Now those same people are mad because ten years later, linux made changes and they had to learn something new again. Waa, waa, waa.