Next time, look up the Thinkpads. My T460p matches your requirements. 14", 32GB, under 2Kg (1.8), Proper i7 HQ CPU (i.e 4 proper cores). Mine came with a built-in GeForce 940MX, but it has never been enabled. External ports work just fine without it.
EUV has been worked on for a while, but at the scales they're ending up on, there's more problems that they don't address in the article. Electromigration starts to become a real problem when the transistors are only a few 10s of atoms wide for example.
"To keep Power constant (at 500mA) when the device has rigged current it is drawing so that it will get 1000mA, it COULD cut the voltage in half since it has control over that. BUT that violates USB standards. They specifically say you can't do that, your only response is to TURN OFF the supply of power entirely."
It's been a while since I read the specs, but isn't this statement contradicting how a USB DCP charger _should_ behave according to BC1.1/1.2 ? As in, when Idcp goes above what the charger can deliver, Vchg should drop..
Now, Apples chargers are not DCP devices, but their phones/tablets surely know how to deal with a DCP charger..
Of course, I'm not going to downplay the effects this could have for Cisco and in the long run for possibly tainted opensource projects.. The comments in here speak for themselves that people can't keep their hands off the source-code.
I've seen the 12.3 sourcecode before, under NDA, and several institutions outside of Cisco has legal access to it. Several universities, most of the larger security-firms such as ISS and whatnot have had access to it for years. So it's been combed through pretty well before. Sure there might be an odd exploit released from this source, but I don't count it as very probable, and certainly not as a threat to internet stability.
All images are timestamped (both on the file, and in the file) Alot of other information such as the name of the photographer, lens used, settings and much much more are also stored in the EXIF information of the JPEGs.
Probably SIs software just doesn't make use of the available data..
The reason they're using ACDSee is that its very fast at displaying the images. A professional editor can easily review 2-3 pictures a second. With 6Mpixels resolution on each picture, you're going to need a fast software and a fast PC to show them to keep up with that..
The SGIs would do an excellent job at this, especially the O2s, since their ICE chip basically is an JPEG accelerator..
..if people actually read and understood the text before making headlines out of it..
First, the law says that if you _requested_ the service, go ahead and use your cookies all you want. But only for the site you wanted to access. This effectively stops banner-ad companies from tracking your movement between sites using persistent cookies, since you never _requested_ to look at their banners.
Second, it only outlaws _storing_ of the information, which in my mind comes to _persistent_ cookie, ergo PHP / ASP session-cookies should be allowed without problems.
I don't see any problem with this law, but I do see alot of good things coming from it. Less spying from evil banner-ad companies for one.
Next time, look up the Thinkpads. My T460p matches your requirements. 14", 32GB, under 2Kg (1.8), Proper i7 HQ CPU (i.e 4 proper cores). Mine came with a built-in GeForce 940MX, but it has never been enabled. External ports work just fine without it.
EUV has been worked on for a while, but at the scales they're ending up on, there's more problems that they don't address in the article. Electromigration starts to become a real problem when the transistors are only a few 10s of atoms wide for example.
"To keep Power constant (at 500mA) when the device has rigged current it is drawing so that it will get 1000mA, it COULD cut the voltage in half since it has control over that. BUT that violates USB standards. They specifically say you can't do that, your only response is to TURN OFF the supply of power entirely."
It's been a while since I read the specs, but isn't this statement contradicting how a USB DCP charger _should_ behave according to BC1.1/1.2 ?
As in, when Idcp goes above what the charger can deliver, Vchg should drop..
Now, Apples chargers are not DCP devices, but their phones/tablets surely know how to deal with a DCP charger..
Of course, I'm not going to downplay the effects this could have for Cisco and in the long run for possibly tainted opensource projects.. The comments in here speak for themselves that people can't keep their hands off the source-code.
I've seen the 12.3 sourcecode before, under NDA, and several institutions outside of Cisco has legal access to it. Several universities, most of the larger security-firms such as ISS and whatnot have had access to it for years. So it's been combed through pretty well before. Sure there might be an odd exploit released from this source, but I don't count it as very probable, and certainly not as a threat to internet stability.
They're way ahead of you there..
All images are timestamped (both on the file, and in the file)
Alot of other information such as the name of the photographer, lens used, settings and much much more are also stored in the EXIF information of the JPEGs.
Probably SIs software just doesn't make use of the available data..
RTFA..
The reason they're using ACDSee is that its very fast at displaying the images. A professional editor can easily review 2-3 pictures a second. With 6Mpixels resolution on each picture, you're going to need a fast software and a fast PC to show them to keep up with that..
The SGIs would do an excellent job at this, especially the O2s, since their ICE chip basically is an JPEG accelerator..
I wouldn't mind if it wasn't so bloody long..
The link (IDG.se) contains false information.
My conclusions come from the actual law..
This text is enormously long (and boring), so translating it isn't really an option for me. Sorry..
..if people actually read and understood the text before making headlines out of it..
First, the law says that if you _requested_ the service, go ahead and use your cookies all you want. But only for the site you wanted to access.
This effectively stops banner-ad companies from tracking your movement between sites using persistent cookies, since you never _requested_ to look at their banners.
Second, it only outlaws _storing_ of the information, which in my mind comes to _persistent_ cookie, ergo PHP / ASP session-cookies should be allowed without problems.
I don't see any problem with this law, but I do see alot of good things coming from it. Less spying from evil banner-ad companies for one.
My 2 cents worth..
It's most definitly a hardware thing.
It's a development of regular NUMA technology, called NUMAflex. See SGIs page about NUMAflex for more in-detail information.
"if you have been a fan of Debian"..
Not only "if", but also "been a fan", implying that most people aren't using Debian any more?
*ducks for cover*
CmdrTaco isn't very funny, now it he?
"The ants were crawling all over the laptop like slashdotters on a poor server"
Panasonics "ToughBook" series is a _tough_ notebook, made for outdoor and industrial use..
t .asp
Doesn't look too bad either..
Some features:
* Shock-restistance
* Spill-resistance
* Vibration-resistance
* Dust-restistance
* Magnesium casing
http://www.panasonic.com/computer/notebook/Defaul
..although not necessarily work-experience..
.....
Asking someone what was their first computer usually gives a pretty decent picture about how serious they are about computers.
Valid answers: TRS-80, VIC-20, C64....
Invalid: Pentium 100