Hmm.. the problem is, if people were actually exposed to vacuum, decompression sickness would onset quite rapidly, and while repressurisation is a treatment, it does fix the problem instantly, or sometimes not at all.
Yeah, I've learned the hard way. IOS 7 next to brocked my iphone 4 - wifi died after upgrade, which is very common occurance. Unfortunately I also updated iPad and can't go back to IOS 6. It's almost unusable with the newer software. But the trick is on Apple, as I'm not buying another tablet after this one dies.
I type this from Macbook pro 2011. The fact that they want me to upgrade every 4 years is telling me I should not "upgrade" to El capitan and newer. And more - it's telling me I should check if ubuntu on windows is useful enough to switch after my mac dies.
I can't find anywhere what hardware is used in the game, and also what hardware was used for training.
I assume it's a cluster of computers talking to each other, writing down trees of possible moves (to RAM, but still writing down), after they have played more games than a single human could in their lifetime against one human brain who is not allowed to talk to other players and has only seen a small fraction of games the AI version has.
Yes, computers with enough resources to compute numerous trees will win. But human brain is still more creative. And incredible, considering how much it can do on a much smaller sample of data and ridiculously small short term memory (sth like 7-10 items only!)
>Recently, on one Devuan box, I noticed that KDE power management (Powerdevil) no longer supported suspend and hibernate.
You know what the problem with that is? Why on earth does KDE even includes power management? And network manager and and and. All those should be just deamons or command line utilities common to all the distros.
Linux is so fragmented it's not even funny. Forked to oblivion.
I fear the day where Apple finally makes OSX as dumb as iOS is. As since Ubuntu switched to unity there's basically no real alternative. It's so sad how fast it went all downhill since what, 2012 or something. Crazy.
Uhm my mac is model 2011, never reinstalled it, never cared much for cleaning it or whatever. Still works pretty ok. I used to reinstall Windows alot. Not sure what it is that Windows is doing wrong, but something is fundamentally wrong with the way installs / updates are managed the system will get clogged no matter what.
if you don't know everybody to know about it, don't put it in writing, ever. Yes, SMS/chat/whatever is writing. Even talking on mobile phone could be "writing".
Can I create a camera which is using nikon or canon bayonet without purchasing the patent / copyright? I sincerely don't know, but I would imagine not. API is a spec, pretty much like a bayonet mount is...
Both work due to gravity. The difference is, in chain fountain, it's the link between beads that's pulling the next bead down and in siphon it's vacuum between molecules in the tube?
Funny, I was just exploring alternative options for my office.
I hate chairs. There is no way anybody use chairs "as intended", e.g. straight back etc. It just doesn't work. Sooner or later you'll crumble in one way or another.
I'm 34, but I've been working with computers for 16 years. Right now I have pain in my left arm, and tickling in my fingers. Probably injured nerve in my neck or sth.
Besides, posture is very important also for the mind. Good posture = better concentration. Buddhists, zen-Buddhists and yogis have figured that a long time ago.
This seems an interesting alternative: http://www.zafu.net/zenoffice.html Not really expensive. I might just order it and try it. I find seiza position quite comfortable, but haven't found any studies on long term health effects. It could slow down blood circulation in legs, which again is not very healthy.
I think in general there's more inovation in Java EE than Java JRE at this point.
What people don't see is that Microsoft changed c# very much from the early days, trying to compete with Java. Dynamic types were addedd to support LINQ, which was added to counter the raise of ORM like Hibernate and later JPA.
In reality, MS has no strategy, they are just adding and adding fetaures, which are percived as invoation, but in reality are just lack of platform strategy. Throw it to the wall and se what sticks is what they do.
Way back in the '90s, MS wanted to enable developers to use Java to write Windows apps.
Really? I was around int the '90s and have no recollection of that.
As a result, MS needed to write their own Java-like language for VB-style form designer apps, and came up with C#.
Please, don't be naive. MS first tried to poison Java by proprietary API (the same tactics Google is using in Android). When they failed, they created a copy of Java, invented a "new" language which is for some reason unbelievable similar to Java + some nice features and started the "developers, developers, developers" mantra. They called.net "java killer" internally, BTW.
How many milliseconds does it take to boot the OS?
I do agree, however, that JVM should cache it's internal state between sessions. Jrockit had something like this, but they dropped it.
What makes Java special:
- it was the first ever platform to unify different platforms and systems under the same umbrella, accessible by the same API
- to this day, it still is the only platform on which you can reuse your expertise and develop for anything, from x86 machines to machines like system z and SPARC and even smart phones and smart cards. You know Java? You can work on any of those systems. Aint that something?
- Java can run on bare metal hypervisor, without an actual OS (Jrockit virtual edition)
- It's also the only true enterprise ready open platform, approved by FSF
- It's vendor independent and is going to stay that way, with at least two major vendors behind it (IBM and Oracle).
Can you say so what o any of those?
Linkq seems nice, but really, what problems does it solve?
In reality, it's a pain to maintain. Hard core devs who write the code want to move on to new projects. Devs maintaining the old codebase are in many cases less proficient.
Java is boring, verbose and gets the job done in this regard.
As for the UI I agree. Some of that is answered by JavaFx, but I personally think it's a step into a wrong direction. Anyway, aren't like 90% apps web based these days?
Hmm.. the problem is, if people were actually exposed to vacuum, decompression sickness would onset quite rapidly, and while repressurisation is a treatment, it does fix the problem instantly, or sometimes not at all.
LOL. You are still being data mined, at least by Facebook (and the government).
Just now I'm doing a showcase with facebook data... it's crazy what's in there, even if you "don't share".
Yeah, I've learned the hard way. IOS 7 next to brocked my iphone 4 - wifi died after upgrade, which is very common occurance. Unfortunately I also updated iPad and can't go back to IOS 6. It's almost unusable with the newer software. But the trick is on Apple, as I'm not buying another tablet after this one dies.
I type this from Macbook pro 2011. The fact that they want me to upgrade every 4 years is telling me I should not "upgrade" to El capitan and newer. And more - it's telling me I should check if ubuntu on windows is useful enough to switch after my mac dies.
Sorry Apple, but no, thanks.
That's like, your opinion man.
Coming from one of the smaller EU member countries, I'm damn happy to have access to EU labor market.
I can't find anywhere what hardware is used in the game, and also what hardware was used for training.
I assume it's a cluster of computers talking to each other, writing down trees of possible moves (to RAM, but still writing down), after they have played more games than a single human could in their lifetime against one human brain who is not allowed to talk to other players and has only seen a small fraction of games the AI version has.
Yes, computers with enough resources to compute numerous trees will win. But human brain is still more creative. And incredible, considering how much it can do on a much smaller sample of data and ridiculously small short term memory (sth like 7-10 items only!)
Running on hardware of my choice?
My 2011 MBP is great, but I'm not looking forward to the day I have to replace it.
>Recently, on one Devuan box, I noticed that KDE power management (Powerdevil) no longer supported suspend and hibernate.
You know what the problem with that is? Why on earth does KDE even includes power management? And network manager and and and. All those should be just deamons or command line utilities common to all the distros.
Linux is so fragmented it's not even funny. Forked to oblivion.
I fear the day where Apple finally makes OSX as dumb as iOS is. As since Ubuntu switched to unity there's basically no real alternative. It's so sad how fast it went all downhill since what, 2012 or something. Crazy.
And systemd is just another nail in the coffin.
Uhm my mac is model 2011, never reinstalled it, never cared much for cleaning it or whatever.
Still works pretty ok. I used to reinstall Windows alot. Not sure what it is that Windows is doing wrong, but something is fundamentally wrong with the way installs / updates are managed the system will get clogged no matter what.
Rule No. 1 of corporate life:
if you don't know everybody to know about it, don't put it in writing, ever. Yes, SMS/chat/whatever is writing. Even talking on mobile phone could be "writing".
Can I create a camera which is using nikon or canon bayonet without purchasing the patent / copyright? I sincerely don't know, but I would imagine not. API is a spec, pretty much like a bayonet mount is...
Both work due to gravity. The difference is, in chain fountain, it's the link between beads that's pulling the next bead down and in siphon it's vacuum between molecules in the tube?
Funny, I was just exploring alternative options for my office.
I hate chairs. There is no way anybody use chairs "as intended", e.g. straight back etc. It just doesn't work. Sooner or later you'll crumble in one way or another.
I'm 34, but I've been working with computers for 16 years. Right now I have pain in my left arm, and tickling in my fingers. Probably injured nerve in my neck or sth.
Besides, posture is very important also for the mind. Good posture = better concentration. Buddhists, zen-Buddhists and yogis have figured that a long time ago.
This seems an interesting alternative: http://www.zafu.net/zenoffice.html Not really expensive. I might just order it and try it. I find seiza position quite comfortable, but haven't found any studies on long term health effects. It could slow down blood circulation in legs, which again is not very healthy.
Exactly. This is - interestingly - aligned with Oracle's "private cloud" vision.
How about don't put anything you want to keep private anywhere online?
Are you saying you trust FB the data which you don't want the world to see and access?
How naive.
I think in general there's more inovation in Java EE than Java JRE at this point.
What people don't see is that Microsoft changed c# very much from the early days, trying to compete with Java.
Dynamic types were addedd to support LINQ, which was added to counter the raise of ORM like Hibernate and later JPA.
In reality, MS has no strategy, they are just adding and adding fetaures, which are percived as invoation, but in reality are just lack of platform strategy. Throw it to the wall and se what sticks is what they do.
Way back in the '90s, MS wanted to enable developers to use Java to write Windows apps.
Really? I was around int the '90s and have no recollection of that.
As a result, MS needed to write their own Java-like language for VB-style form designer apps, and came up with C#.
Please, don't be naive. MS first tried to poison Java by proprietary API (the same tactics Google is using in Android). When they failed, they created a copy of Java, invented a "new" language which is for some reason unbelievable similar to Java + some nice features and started the "developers, developers, developers" mantra. They called .net "java killer" internally, BTW.
Java was and still is a major risk for Microsoft.
To be replaced by what?
How many milliseconds does it take to boot the OS? I do agree, however, that JVM should cache it's internal state between sessions. Jrockit had something like this, but they dropped it.
What makes Java special: - it was the first ever platform to unify different platforms and systems under the same umbrella, accessible by the same API - to this day, it still is the only platform on which you can reuse your expertise and develop for anything, from x86 machines to machines like system z and SPARC and even smart phones and smart cards. You know Java? You can work on any of those systems. Aint that something? - Java can run on bare metal hypervisor, without an actual OS (Jrockit virtual edition) - It's also the only true enterprise ready open platform, approved by FSF - It's vendor independent and is going to stay that way, with at least two major vendors behind it (IBM and Oracle). Can you say so what o any of those?
Linkq seems nice, but really, what problems does it solve? In reality, it's a pain to maintain. Hard core devs who write the code want to move on to new projects. Devs maintaining the old codebase are in many cases less proficient. Java is boring, verbose and gets the job done in this regard. As for the UI I agree. Some of that is answered by JavaFx, but I personally think it's a step into a wrong direction. Anyway, aren't like 90% apps web based these days?
Would you risk your next big project to run on Mono? Is Java the lesser evil again?
I, for one, would not a use a phone / OS BECAUSE it syncs with Google. So Googless Android is the only kind of Android that appeals to me.
How so? My P1i from a few years back is a java-enabled touch screen phone.
Good point. I think there's an aircraft visible in the video, possible passenger jet, so probably no NOTAMs