I wondered the same thing. Here is what the Bitcoin website says.
Bitcoin "accounts" do not have people's names on them and do not have to correspond to individuals. Each balance is simply associated with a randomly generated public-private key pair and the money "belongs" to whoever has the private key and can sign transactions with it. The transactions that are signed using those keys also don't have to include names. A Bitcoin address mathematically corresponds to a public key and looks like this: 15VjRaDX9zpbA8LVnbrCAFzrVzN7ixHNsC Each person can have many such addresses, each with its own balance, and this can make it more difficult to identify which person owns what amount. In order to protect his privacy, Bob can even generate a new public-private key pair for each individual transaction. So David receiving the coin from Charley will not be able to identify who is the second person in the list of transactions (not without asking Charley).
Emacs and Vim have GUIs, and they are named xemacs and gvim respectively. I program with a GUI as well, but you can move around pretty quick with the command line versions of these tools once you learn the right shortcuts.
They did actually worry about Tsunamis. Unfortunately this particular Tsunami was as I recall several meters taller than what they planned on, just as the quake was over an order of magnitude larger than they planned on. If you want to blame someone, blame the person who made the determination of the largest quakes and tsunamis to prepare for. I don't see how you can call an engineer incompetent if you exceed his safety margin and then bad things happen.
I can see how a classified document might get a FOUO marking, but if the document has UNCLASSIFIED across the top of the pages, it is extremely unlikely that is a mistake. Everyone I know who works with classified information is extremely careful about that.
I might be a little dramatic, but the increase in cancer occurrence is statistically noticeable at over 100 mSv/yr. The new limits in Japan are 250 mSv. The operators won't all get cancer and die, but staying has the potential to cost some operators a great deal many years down the road. It doesn't do any good to overstate the risk, but lets not sell them short either.
While I would like to believe Iran just wants to advance science it bothers me that the same technology required to put a satellite in orbit is also what is used to build an ICBM.
In order to have useful conversations with people who think the other way, lets at least make sure we understand their fears.
There is the belief that everyone or very nearly everyone in Guantanamo is guilty, but there is the fear that war is not a conducive environment to gather and retain the same burden of proof as is required for a civil case. Any time this proves to be the case, the defendant will be acquitted regardless of their actual guilt. The fear is then that the people that we release incorrectly will then go back to attempting to kill our soldiers.
This doesn't mean you're wrong, but when we feel strongly one way or the other over this, we tend to turn others position's into straw men. Thats unfortunately a counter productive tendency that humans find it very easy to engage in. I just want to try and keep it from happening here.
I see what you're doing here. You're taking the constitution literally and thinking that it has objective meaning which does not change. While that's great and I wish you well, the courts and the legislative session doesn't see it that way. These days we don't have a functional constitution any more than the United Kingdom does. It just happens to make a useful argument when the courts don't like something.
That sounds nice in theory, but I know that at least with NVIDIA's computing driver there isn't a whole lot of memory protection going on. My experience has been that its not terribly difficult to crash your entire system with a user level program.
What I really meant to get across was that because of the volumes that these systems need to trade in to make money, they have the capacity to make very large impacts on the market if they misbehave. Because of this, we should at the very least be aware of them and the dangers that they pose when they misbehave.
Ars Technica wrote an interesting article about this almost a year ago. What is happening now isn't anything all that new. As several people have already mentioned, yes this is dangerous because these tools trade in extremely large sums. Slashdot even covered United Airlines stock dropping from $12 to $3 when the news crawler for one of these tools thought an old story was new and the tool proceeded to dump its entire United holdings causing a massive sell off by other investors.
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/07/-it-sounds-like-something.arshttp://tech.slashdot.org/tech/08/09/10/203233.shtml
Describing caching as a way Windows makes your computer "appear" faster is really a little disingenuous. If that is the only metric for your complaint then you should be angry that your processor caches as well. After all, your processor takes the time to check two or three caches every time it issues a move instruction. If it misses every time, then it has to pick what to throw out of the cache and read directly from memory. Wouldn't it be so much better if it just made a fetch to ram every time there was a move instruction? After all, your processors caches only "appear" to make your processor faster right?
The question that people should be asking if they want to get upset about SuperFetch is does this approach to ram use benefit the user enough to be worth the extra complexity in the operating system's memory allocator.
All of the missile defense elements have failed tests at one time or another. THAAD failed its first 6 intercept tests and has succeeded in its last 2. GMD has been successful in 8/15 of its intercept tests. This particular test did not fail because of the interceptor but because SBX, the supporting radar, failed. SBX is relatively new to GMD.
Well that's embarrassing, I got mixed up half way down my list as to which device was which device.
Its easy to only list the biggest differences that make the netbook look nice. I'm guessing you're talking about the MSI Wind.
1.6 pounds vs. 3 pounds
Ability to use while you hold it in your hand vs. requiring your computer to be in your lap
9.56" x 7.47" x 0.5" v. 10.24" x 7.09" x 0.75" - 1.24"
3G vs. vs. 3G
10 hour battery (no listed reviews yet) vs. 14 hour battery (7.5 listed on review site)
1024x768 resolution vs. 1024x600 resolution
The jury is still out on usability and that will be one of the most important differentiators.
Sure this doesn't tilt things squarely in the iPad's favor but if you're just going to compare processing power and price you might as well throw your smart phone away and buy a netbook.
Its easy to only list the biggest differences that make the netbook look nice. I'm guessing you're talking about the MSI Wind.
1.6 pounds vs. 3 pounds Ability to use while you hold it in your hand vs. requiring your computer to be in your lap 10.24" x 7.09" x 0.75" - 1.24" vs. 9.56" x 7.47" x 0.5" No 3G vs. 3G 14 hour battery (7.5 listed on review site) vs. 10 hour battery (no listed reviews yet) 1024x600 resolution vs. 1024x768 resolution
The jury is still out on usability and that will be one of the most important differentiators.
Sure this doesn't tilt things squarely in the iPad's favor but if you're just going to compare processing power and price you might as well throw your smart phone away and buy a netbook.
The poster probably doesn't want to have to learn keybindings for a new editor. He may even already know them but just prefers vim keybindings. What he really probably wants is the luxuries of of a full IDE without having to give up the editing flexibility and familiarity he has with vim.
Why is it so hard for EA to understand why people are upset about an install limit? It is not at all uncommon to install a computer game at least five or ten times. There are plenty of instances where people will even install their games more often for perfectly legitimate reasons.
Yes, it would be nice to not need a crack to play without the disk, but what good is that if 5 installs later I can't even play the game. It is completely unacceptable to be required to call EA and beg to be able to play what I payed for.
I read an EA employee's comment that said something along the lines of Spore has only had a very small number of people need more than 3 installs. I think they're missing the point. If your game hasn't even been out a year and you already have people hitting their limit, then that should be a clue that you don't have a long term solution. Saying, "our bad, we'll update it to a max of 5 installs and you can negotiate with us for more on a case by case basis" is like trying to fix a hole in the space shuttle's insulating tiles with a layer of duct tape.
Perhaps you are right. I just seemed to remember reading something along those lines.
What I do know is that Forged Alliance was released on November 6th, and there was a no SecuROM patch out by at least the 16th, which was when I got it.
Similarly, the original game was released on Feb 16, 2007 and there was a no-SecuROM patch for it on March 5, 2007.
Perhaps there wasn't any such requirement for the DRM, but it just seems odd to me that a company would only go to the trouble of putting SecuROM on their product for an average of 14 days. That certainly doesn't seem to be standard usage practice.
The game was release Feb 16, 2007 and the no SecuROM patch was released on March 5, 2007. That wasn't as short as I had thought, but then again its not as long as you had claimed either.
I can't vouch for the original game, but I got the expansion within two weeks of the release and there was already a no SecuROM patch. It certainly wasn't a few months. I can't speak for the original though, so you might be right there.
Supreme Commander was a case where the developers were forced to ship games with Securerom, but they had no requirements placed upon them about removing it via a patch. Since that was the case, they abided by the letter of the law and then immediately stripped it off.
I don't know where you're getting your plan info from, but my friend's iPhone contract sets him back about $65 a month. Thats not cheap, but its a lot cheaper than $100.
Vertical space is at a premium. Does it really not bother you to lose half of it by tiling vertically?
I wondered the same thing. Here is what the Bitcoin website says.
Bitcoin "accounts" do not have people's names on them and do not have to correspond to individuals. Each balance is simply associated with a randomly generated public-private key pair and the money "belongs" to whoever has the private key and can sign transactions with it. The transactions that are signed using those keys also don't have to include names.
A Bitcoin address mathematically corresponds to a public key and looks like this:
15VjRaDX9zpbA8LVnbrCAFzrVzN7ixHNsC
Each person can have many such addresses, each with its own balance, and this can make it more difficult to identify which person owns what amount. In order to protect his privacy, Bob can even generate a new public-private key pair for each individual transaction. So David receiving the coin from Charley will not be able to identify who is the second person in the list of transactions (not without asking Charley).
Emacs and Vim have GUIs, and they are named xemacs and gvim respectively. I program with a GUI as well, but you can move around pretty quick with the command line versions of these tools once you learn the right shortcuts.
They did actually worry about Tsunamis. Unfortunately this particular Tsunami was as I recall several meters taller than what they planned on, just as the quake was over an order of magnitude larger than they planned on. If you want to blame someone, blame the person who made the determination of the largest quakes and tsunamis to prepare for. I don't see how you can call an engineer incompetent if you exceed his safety margin and then bad things happen.
I can see how a classified document might get a FOUO marking, but if the document has UNCLASSIFIED across the top of the pages, it is extremely unlikely that is a mistake. Everyone I know who works with classified information is extremely careful about that.
I might be a little dramatic, but the increase in cancer occurrence is statistically noticeable at over 100 mSv/yr. The new limits in Japan are 250 mSv. The operators won't all get cancer and die, but staying has the potential to cost some operators a great deal many years down the road. It doesn't do any good to overstate the risk, but lets not sell them short either.
While I would like to believe Iran just wants to advance science it bothers me that the same technology required to put a satellite in orbit is also what is used to build an ICBM.
In order to have useful conversations with people who think the other way, lets at least make sure we understand their fears.
There is the belief that everyone or very nearly everyone in Guantanamo is guilty, but there is the fear that war is not a conducive environment to gather and retain the same burden of proof as is required for a civil case. Any time this proves to be the case, the defendant will be acquitted regardless of their actual guilt. The fear is then that the people that we release incorrectly will then go back to attempting to kill our soldiers.
This doesn't mean you're wrong, but when we feel strongly one way or the other over this, we tend to turn others position's into straw men. Thats unfortunately a counter productive tendency that humans find it very easy to engage in. I just want to try and keep it from happening here.
I see what you're doing here. You're taking the constitution literally and thinking that it has objective meaning which does not change. While that's great and I wish you well, the courts and the legislative session doesn't see it that way. These days we don't have a functional constitution any more than the United Kingdom does. It just happens to make a useful argument when the courts don't like something.
That sounds nice in theory, but I know that at least with NVIDIA's computing driver there isn't a whole lot of memory protection going on. My experience has been that its not terribly difficult to crash your entire system with a user level program.
Ladies and gentlemen, I call you attention to Exhibit A for the real world consequences of poor design decisions.
What I really meant to get across was that because of the volumes that these systems need to trade in to make money, they have the capacity to make very large impacts on the market if they misbehave. Because of this, we should at the very least be aware of them and the dangers that they pose when they misbehave.
Ars Technica wrote an interesting article about this almost a year ago. What is happening now isn't anything all that new. As several people have already mentioned, yes this is dangerous because these tools trade in extremely large sums. Slashdot even covered United Airlines stock dropping from $12 to $3 when the news crawler for one of these tools thought an old story was new and the tool proceeded to dump its entire United holdings causing a massive sell off by other investors. http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2009/07/-it-sounds-like-something.ars http://tech.slashdot.org/tech/08/09/10/203233.shtml
Describing caching as a way Windows makes your computer "appear" faster is really a little disingenuous. If that is the only metric for your complaint then you should be angry that your processor caches as well. After all, your processor takes the time to check two or three caches every time it issues a move instruction. If it misses every time, then it has to pick what to throw out of the cache and read directly from memory. Wouldn't it be so much better if it just made a fetch to ram every time there was a move instruction? After all, your processors caches only "appear" to make your processor faster right? The question that people should be asking if they want to get upset about SuperFetch is does this approach to ram use benefit the user enough to be worth the extra complexity in the operating system's memory allocator.
All of the missile defense elements have failed tests at one time or another. THAAD failed its first 6 intercept tests and has succeeded in its last 2. GMD has been successful in 8/15 of its intercept tests. This particular test did not fail because of the interceptor but because SBX, the supporting radar, failed. SBX is relatively new to GMD.
Well that's embarrassing, I got mixed up half way down my list as to which device was which device. Its easy to only list the biggest differences that make the netbook look nice. I'm guessing you're talking about the MSI Wind. 1.6 pounds vs. 3 pounds Ability to use while you hold it in your hand vs. requiring your computer to be in your lap 9.56" x 7.47" x 0.5" v. 10.24" x 7.09" x 0.75" - 1.24" 3G vs. vs. 3G 10 hour battery (no listed reviews yet) vs. 14 hour battery (7.5 listed on review site) 1024x768 resolution vs. 1024x600 resolution The jury is still out on usability and that will be one of the most important differentiators. Sure this doesn't tilt things squarely in the iPad's favor but if you're just going to compare processing power and price you might as well throw your smart phone away and buy a netbook.
Its easy to only list the biggest differences that make the netbook look nice. I'm guessing you're talking about the MSI Wind.
1.6 pounds vs. 3 pounds
Ability to use while you hold it in your hand vs. requiring your computer to be in your lap
10.24" x 7.09" x 0.75" - 1.24" vs. 9.56" x 7.47" x 0.5"
No 3G vs. 3G
14 hour battery (7.5 listed on review site) vs. 10 hour battery (no listed reviews yet)
1024x600 resolution vs. 1024x768 resolution
The jury is still out on usability and that will be one of the most important differentiators.
Sure this doesn't tilt things squarely in the iPad's favor but if you're just going to compare processing power and price you might as well throw your smart phone away and buy a netbook.
The poster probably doesn't want to have to learn keybindings for a new editor. He may even already know them but just prefers vim keybindings. What he really probably wants is the luxuries of of a full IDE without having to give up the editing flexibility and familiarity he has with vim.
Why is it so hard for EA to understand why people are upset about an install limit? It is not at all uncommon to install a computer game at least five or ten times. There are plenty of instances where people will even install their games more often for perfectly legitimate reasons. Yes, it would be nice to not need a crack to play without the disk, but what good is that if 5 installs later I can't even play the game. It is completely unacceptable to be required to call EA and beg to be able to play what I payed for. I read an EA employee's comment that said something along the lines of Spore has only had a very small number of people need more than 3 installs. I think they're missing the point. If your game hasn't even been out a year and you already have people hitting their limit, then that should be a clue that you don't have a long term solution. Saying, "our bad, we'll update it to a max of 5 installs and you can negotiate with us for more on a case by case basis" is like trying to fix a hole in the space shuttle's insulating tiles with a layer of duct tape.
Don't forget the page file. The horror; your computer is constantly taking screen shots of your applications ram and storing them on the hard drive!
Perhaps you are right. I just seemed to remember reading something along those lines. What I do know is that Forged Alliance was released on November 6th, and there was a no SecuROM patch out by at least the 16th, which was when I got it. Similarly, the original game was released on Feb 16, 2007 and there was a no-SecuROM patch for it on March 5, 2007. Perhaps there wasn't any such requirement for the DRM, but it just seems odd to me that a company would only go to the trouble of putting SecuROM on their product for an average of 14 days. That certainly doesn't seem to be standard usage practice.
The game was release Feb 16, 2007 and the no SecuROM patch was released on March 5, 2007. That wasn't as short as I had thought, but then again its not as long as you had claimed either.
I can't vouch for the original game, but I got the expansion within two weeks of the release and there was already a no SecuROM patch. It certainly wasn't a few months. I can't speak for the original though, so you might be right there.
Supreme Commander was a case where the developers were forced to ship games with Securerom, but they had no requirements placed upon them about removing it via a patch. Since that was the case, they abided by the letter of the law and then immediately stripped it off.
I don't know where you're getting your plan info from, but my friend's iPhone contract sets him back about $65 a month. Thats not cheap, but its a lot cheaper than $100.