just because people have clearances doesn't mean they have skillsets that would benefit this. It just means they don't have the markers that make them untrustworthy with highly sensitive information. there are plenty of people who hold a top-secret clearance that don't know where the "any" key is
it sounds more like someone got cyber-security industry confused with security clearance. i understand their need for cyber-defensive capabilities. some banks, like USAA, actually run their own in house cyber operations desk to help protect their digital assets. cyber-security as a trade spans across all digitally connected industries (govt, banking, industrial, commercial....) and they are all being head-hunted by the same groups. this would just be another company throwing their sharks into the feeding tank.
this is the man that helped coin the term cyberspace. His influence with just this series alone can directly be seen in movies like the Matrix and The Lawnmower Man (the movie, not the Stephen King novel), as well as manga/anime such as Ghost in the Shell and Cowboy Bebop. so much of his futuresight is intertwined with modern pop culture and we don't even consciously know about it.
these figures only cover pre-built computers, such as HP/Dell/Apple. This does not take into account home PC users that build their own computers from parts. Granted the DIY market has suffered past couple months due to crypto-mining eating up all the midrange video cards, as well as newer technology being released, which has caused some folks to "hold off" buying
They make Phase-change cooling kits that have a dedicated cooling block that mounts to the CPU to literally refrigerate the CPU. you have to pack all of the surrounding area of the CPU with moisture blocking foam to eliminate condensation.
these types of systems cost a couple grand and up but they do help you get the CPU down close to freezing.
as far as practicality, unless you are trying to severely overclock your CPU for ePeen score, or your ambient air temp is 120+F, they have no real world use above what a standard watercooling system will do you for roughly $100.
a 64KB file that provided fully 3d rendered graphics and high quality music. this was obviously a static designed presentation so its easy to tune to that level, as well as being 3d graphics versus video frames.
i see it being possible, but more as a post-content encoding method, than an on-the-fly method.
Probable, MAYBE. Practical, prob needs high CPU/GPU acceleration to be able to encode on the fly, and possibly on decode too.
that's the height at which air atmosphere stops and Outer Space begins, technically outside the country. So start listing mileage as only 62 miles until international space. treat like you would be shipping to Japan.
I did try. nothing was able to see any of the data. Prob didnt help that this was a RAID-1 array that got knocked into a verify run after the partitions were deleted.
I actually had the issue of Windows 10 deleting its OWN partitions. computer started running funny, then it BSODed and then would only boot to a flashing cursor. Booted into repair only to find that my system drive was reporting as 100% available. not even the Windows 10 system partitions were present. nothing could read any semblance of a partition table from the drive to recover any of my data.
stock is nothing more than a logical representation of something we assign a value to for the purpose of exchanging it between owners. the value is not based on the stock itself, but based on the demand for the stock. Now replace the word "stock" in that statement with the word "bitcoin".
so hes proposing to back a stock like item with another stock like item. yeah. no sense made there.
the only difference really between stock and bitcoin is that stocks are fully regulated where bitcoin is not. the regulation is what helps stabilize to a point the stock market whereas bitcoin is insanely variable.
overall i used to have the same problem back in the day. heavy internet use would lock up my old Linksys router about every other day and had to manually power cycle it to clear it up. I ended up replacing it with a PC running a software firewall (originally OpenBSD running pf, now pfSense). all my wireless access points are basic Linksys units but they are running as stripped down as possible. they are really only wireless bridges and don't host any connections anymore. ALL services are handled by my pfSense firewall (DHCP, DNS forwarding, NAT rules, etc.) and I have had zero network lockups or burnouts since.
I have upgraded my PC to a beefed up desktop running VMware ESX hosting the pfSense firewall and now also a FreeNAS file server and an XP session to run my print server as well as my network media streaming for the house. I can easily saturate my 30 Mbit cable connection and still idle the server.. I should not see issues until i am trying to push 500+ Mbit, which wont be for a while.
If the data center is built with the correct architectural planning and resilience, then no it shouldn't affect it at all. these are the same centers that withstood the Earthquake and the horrendous storms recently. Granted that Amazon was a casualty of the storms, but there were so many other organizations that ran without a single hiccup. this is the reason yo want to load balance your service across geographically separate areas. its highly unlikely that a hurricane is nailing your east coast center the same time the Mississippi is flooding your mid west center and an earthquake takes out your west coast center. SOME users will be temporarily inconvenienced, but the service as a whole will be online.
the main things that relate to a data center staying operational: 1) will the building physically survive the incident. no brainer. 2) can power be maintained, including generator support. no brainer 3) can the telco connections stay active. no point in humming servers if a tree takes out your connection to the world.
all "Linux" is GNU/Linux. bare metal Linux would be just a kernel. GNU is the Operating System that runs on the Linux Kernel. you can swap the kernel out and get other combos, like Debians GNU/FreeBSD distro.
I do agree that Linux should be a bit more genericised, but then the main distros loose the manageability they provide now. the compatibility checks that they all do on their internal code bases. as for patches and updates, most of them will float the changes all the way to the root of the application they are fixing, but have the ability to patch it in their spin of it faster.
start menu is in the same place its been, bottom left of the screen. if you put your mouse in the absolute corner, you get a little popup showing the start menu. DONT MOVE, just click the corner.
Ahh. you sir are correct. Johnny was a short story published in 1981 in Omni magazine. Neuromancer was written in 1984.
For those interested in reading the original story, it is included in Burning Chrome
Johnny Mnemonic was written directly as the prequel to Neuromancer. It was also written directly as a screenplay. the book version came after the movie.
i have 20 mbit comcast and i get 20 mbit consistent. i have pegged BT downloads for hours at the speed, and i have downloaded ISO files that maintain the full advertised speed.
i think it really depends on the market you are in as to how well your comcast connection is.
considering that you never get full bandwidth on any network.
Even if you direct connect 2 computers together at 100mbit and transfer files...it wont be going at full 100 mbit speeds.
and in any network, the more nodes you add to the system, the more that network top speed is brought down since it is now shared across many nodes.
This is the reason that the ISPs have tier caps well below what the physical interface actually provides as it makes it more likely that you WILL peg out at your tier speed. I.E. i offer a 100 mbit trunk at "up to" 10 mbit to 10 people, you will most likely never dip below the 10 i advertised, but if i offer it to 20 people, then you might be stooping down to only 5 mbit.
and anyone else notice that comcast will be offering 100mbit speeds in the near future?
if you read the book SnowCrash, you will understand the exact purpose of second life as it is modeled after the Metaverse.
but overall, its just an animated chatroom, kind of like how MSChat made IRC look like a comic book for no real reason
I think you are really refering to the book "Neuromancer" as that is the book that started that entire genre.
if you like GitS, I highly recommend reading it as you will see direct influence in GitS and Cowboy Bebop.
Also another book to read along side "Neuromancer" is "Snow Crash".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromancerhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowcrash
the one thing i have found interesting are the ink packs. I personally have an HP printer that uses 02 ink packs. the funny thing about these is the price disparity on the inks. single colors are 11 bucks with black being 20 bucks. or i can get the 5 cartridge (cyan, light cyan, magenta, light magenta, and yellow) for close to $50, but what i usually get is the 6 cartridge pack (same as 5 cartridge, but it adds a black and 150-sheets of 4x6 photo paper) for 35 bucks.
I have asked several stores why the 5 cartridge costs more than the 6 cartridge and I have yet to get an answer other than "yeah, that doesnt make sense either"
just because people have clearances doesn't mean they have skillsets that would benefit this. It just means they don't have the markers that make them untrustworthy with highly sensitive information. there are plenty of people who hold a top-secret clearance that don't know where the "any" key is
it sounds more like someone got cyber-security industry confused with security clearance. i understand their need for cyber-defensive capabilities. some banks, like USAA, actually run their own in house cyber operations desk to help protect their digital assets. cyber-security as a trade spans across all digitally connected industries (govt, banking, industrial, commercial....) and they are all being head-hunted by the same groups. this would just be another company throwing their sharks into the feeding tank.
this is the man that helped coin the term cyberspace. His influence with just this series alone can directly be seen in movies like the Matrix and The Lawnmower Man (the movie, not the Stephen King novel), as well as manga/anime such as Ghost in the Shell and Cowboy Bebop. so much of his futuresight is intertwined with modern pop culture and we don't even consciously know about it.
these figures only cover pre-built computers, such as HP/Dell/Apple. This does not take into account home PC users that build their own computers from parts. Granted the DIY market has suffered past couple months due to crypto-mining eating up all the midrange video cards, as well as newer technology being released, which has caused some folks to "hold off" buying
They make Phase-change cooling kits that have a dedicated cooling block that mounts to the CPU to literally refrigerate the CPU. you have to pack all of the surrounding area of the CPU with moisture blocking foam to eliminate condensation.
these types of systems cost a couple grand and up but they do help you get the CPU down close to freezing.
as far as practicality, unless you are trying to severely overclock your CPU for ePeen score, or your ambient air temp is 120+F, they have no real world use above what a standard watercooling system will do you for roughly $100.
this seriously reminds me of http://www.theproduct.de/
a 64KB file that provided fully 3d rendered graphics and high quality music. this was obviously a static designed presentation so its easy to tune to that level, as well as being 3d graphics versus video frames.
i see it being possible, but more as a post-content encoding method, than an on-the-fly method.
Probable, MAYBE. Practical, prob needs high CPU/GPU acceleration to be able to encode on the fly, and possibly on decode too.
that's the height at which air atmosphere stops and Outer Space begins, technically outside the country. So start listing mileage as only 62 miles until international space. treat like you would be shipping to Japan.
I did try. nothing was able to see any of the data. Prob didnt help that this was a RAID-1 array that got knocked into a verify run after the partitions were deleted.
I actually had the issue of Windows 10 deleting its OWN partitions. computer started running funny, then it BSODed and then would only boot to a flashing cursor. Booted into repair only to find that my system drive was reporting as 100% available. not even the Windows 10 system partitions were present. nothing could read any semblance of a partition table from the drive to recover any of my data.
must be common core level math.
so was it 25% or 40/120 people?
use the original Midel B with the Wolfson then. if you need the B+ specifically, you are limited to USB audio inputs.
you could add the Wolfson Audio Card to the Pi and get all the audio support you could need from a pi
http://www.adafruit.com/produc...
...kind of.
stock is nothing more than a logical representation of something we assign a value to for the purpose of exchanging it between owners. the value is not based on the stock itself, but based on the demand for the stock. Now replace the word "stock" in that statement with the word "bitcoin".
so hes proposing to back a stock like item with another stock like item. yeah. no sense made there.
the only difference really between stock and bitcoin is that stocks are fully regulated where bitcoin is not. the regulation is what helps stabilize to a point the stock market whereas bitcoin is insanely variable.
overall i used to have the same problem back in the day. heavy internet use would lock up my old Linksys router about every other day and had to manually power cycle it to clear it up. I ended up replacing it with a PC running a software firewall (originally OpenBSD running pf, now pfSense). all my wireless access points are basic Linksys units but they are running as stripped down as possible. they are really only wireless bridges and don't host any connections anymore. ALL services are handled by my pfSense firewall (DHCP, DNS forwarding, NAT rules, etc.) and I have had zero network lockups or burnouts since.
I have upgraded my PC to a beefed up desktop running VMware ESX hosting the pfSense firewall and now also a FreeNAS file server and an XP session to run my print server as well as my network media streaming for the house. I can easily saturate my 30 Mbit cable connection and still idle the server.. I should not see issues until i am trying to push 500+ Mbit, which wont be for a while.
If the data center is built with the correct architectural planning and resilience, then no it shouldn't affect it at all. these are the same centers that withstood the Earthquake and the horrendous storms recently. Granted that Amazon was a casualty of the storms, but there were so many other organizations that ran without a single hiccup. this is the reason yo want to load balance your service across geographically separate areas. its highly unlikely that a hurricane is nailing your east coast center the same time the Mississippi is flooding your mid west center and an earthquake takes out your west coast center. SOME users will be temporarily inconvenienced, but the service as a whole will be online.
the main things that relate to a data center staying operational:
1) will the building physically survive the incident. no brainer.
2) can power be maintained, including generator support. no brainer
3) can the telco connections stay active. no point in humming servers if a tree takes out your connection to the world.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/289607-data-centers-prove-earthquake-proof
all "Linux" is GNU/Linux. bare metal Linux would be just a kernel. GNU is the Operating System that runs on the Linux Kernel. you can swap the kernel out and get other combos, like Debians GNU/FreeBSD distro. I do agree that Linux should be a bit more genericised, but then the main distros loose the manageability they provide now. the compatibility checks that they all do on their internal code bases. as for patches and updates, most of them will float the changes all the way to the root of the application they are fixing, but have the ability to patch it in their spin of it faster.
start menu is in the same place its been, bottom left of the screen. if you put your mouse in the absolute corner, you get a little popup showing the start menu. DONT MOVE, just click the corner.
Ahh. you sir are correct. Johnny was a short story published in 1981 in Omni magazine. Neuromancer was written in 1984. For those interested in reading the original story, it is included in Burning Chrome
Johnny Mnemonic was written directly as the prequel to Neuromancer. It was also written directly as a screenplay. the book version came after the movie.
good thing the character that Keanu played in Johnny Mnemonic doesnt exist in neuromancer then.
wel good thing I dont have to worry about that with the linux install on my PS3....oh wait.......
i have 20 mbit comcast and i get 20 mbit consistent. i have pegged BT downloads for hours at the speed, and i have downloaded ISO files that maintain the full advertised speed. i think it really depends on the market you are in as to how well your comcast connection is.
considering that you never get full bandwidth on any network. Even if you direct connect 2 computers together at 100mbit and transfer files...it wont be going at full 100 mbit speeds. and in any network, the more nodes you add to the system, the more that network top speed is brought down since it is now shared across many nodes. This is the reason that the ISPs have tier caps well below what the physical interface actually provides as it makes it more likely that you WILL peg out at your tier speed. I.E. i offer a 100 mbit trunk at "up to" 10 mbit to 10 people, you will most likely never dip below the 10 i advertised, but if i offer it to 20 people, then you might be stooping down to only 5 mbit. and anyone else notice that comcast will be offering 100mbit speeds in the near future?
if you read the book SnowCrash, you will understand the exact purpose of second life as it is modeled after the Metaverse. but overall, its just an animated chatroom, kind of like how MSChat made IRC look like a comic book for no real reason
I think you are really refering to the book "Neuromancer" as that is the book that started that entire genre. if you like GitS, I highly recommend reading it as you will see direct influence in GitS and Cowboy Bebop. Also another book to read along side "Neuromancer" is "Snow Crash". http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Neuromancer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Snowcrash
the one thing i have found interesting are the ink packs. I personally have an HP printer that uses 02 ink packs. the funny thing about these is the price disparity on the inks. single colors are 11 bucks with black being 20 bucks. or i can get the 5 cartridge (cyan, light cyan, magenta, light magenta, and yellow) for close to $50, but what i usually get is the 6 cartridge pack (same as 5 cartridge, but it adds a black and 150-sheets of 4x6 photo paper) for 35 bucks. I have asked several stores why the 5 cartridge costs more than the 6 cartridge and I have yet to get an answer other than "yeah, that doesnt make sense either"