Comment Re:Oh sure, but... (Score 1) 83
Yeah, I don't know how else you control side-fumbling.
Yeah, I don't know how else you control side-fumbling.
it's not a turbo-encabulator.I've been wanting one of those for a long time.
If I can assay a guess, being a Deb user, I would say that that was probably for a version based on 1.6, or even God forbid, 1.7. 1.8 brought things along nicely, and 1.9 is very solid. It's like all php based apps, though: there are probably ways into it. Php-based apps on Debian do tend to be older, and so I almost always have to install and maintain them out of the main debian process.
What are you doing about staff development for the changes in Moodle 2? I support a number of districts, and that's my biggest concern. We've got teachers comfortable using it finally, and training on the new file management system alone is going to be a pain...
Years ago, I was a military brat there. One day, everybody spent all day waiting for the MX missile test launch. It was going to happen just after 7. Everybody knew this, even though it was a highly 'secret' event. (They also used to send the MP's around telling everybody to go indoors when there were other 'secret' launches.)7
It wasn't like the Soviets hadn't been informed there was a launch, anyway.
Speaking of, the runway wasn't *built* for the shuttle, it was extended. They used it to land c-5a's and such before.
A fan of malignant and malicious neglect, from my experience.
Not meaning to sound like a dick, but it's poke salat. There was even a song about it way back in the day, Poke Salat Annie.
It's also poke sallet and salit. It's still pronounced as salad is normally. My grandma spelled it sallet, but said it as salad, so I went for conventional orthography.
And abandoned fields across the American south became the new gold fields of the Yukon.
That stuff pops up everywhere, and grows like you wouldn't believe. I can't imagine how well it would do if you fertilized.
And of course, you can use the leaves for poke salad. With a lot of boiling...
Well, he did have another job function that I know of, but they didn't mention it in the article.
Always fun when you see your place of employment in a newspaper article.
I don't recall there being the mouth shield before. It might have been there. It probably was, and I just wasn't thinking of applications for cubicle-worker dictation then.
Regardless, you couldn't hear her speaking into it, and she was definitely recording events. When the judge would ask if anybody knew the defendant, and none of the jurors responded, she was entering that fact; or at least, you could see that she was saying something.
This was a city-level court in Georgia, dealing with low-level criminal and civil cases.
I have no idea if they're transcribing as you say; you're probably right. I do know that a) they were recording with a pc there and b) she was using the mouth-hood to record when people nodded, etc. They have this big ol' MOTU firewire box to take input from all the microphones. I didn't actually get a chance to see the software.
10 years ago, they used digital tape in this same courtroom. 20 years ago, they had a steno machine.
I went to jury duty the other day, and the steno reporter... wasn't really using a steno machine. She was annotating the taping by speaking the non-verbal events into a little mouth-shield thingie.
So verbal dictation is possible- you'll just like more of a geek.
User education. It won't go away, you always need to do it, and for most users, you have to do it multiple times. Proximity systems may help, but...
For the record, on a winders machine, window-L. Two keystrokes, you're done. Well, mostly, but that'll keep most people out.
Well, yeah. But it's still got to take a lot of infrastructure that really sounds beyond their capabilities. Let's say:
16 tb drives, 1 eb= 62,500 drives.
Let's say 2 weeks of storage; 875,000.
Let's say 200 per. Let's say $100 extra per for the racks, cases, controllers.
$262,000,000 just for the storage.
I dunno, 1.5billion euros, with first usage in 2013 and full capabilities and usage in 2022; maybe they'll make it with that budget if they speak to somebody who already does lots of computation and storage, say: the Big G.
Okay, if I do some rough math, just on the hard drives to dump that to
assuming 2tb drives, and ignoring the binary/decimal nonsense to be quick
assuming that the 1eb per day is correct and not the
assuming that 2tb costs $100 (volume discount, you know)
assuming no costs for things to hold these drives, and electricity, etc.
180 million drives. 18 billion dollars. Per year.
Let's assume by 2013 we've gone eightfold, to 16tb drives. Good, now we're at 2million ish drives and 2billionish dollars. Good
I realize they're planning for it all, but I just can't see how they're really going to store, let alone process, all that data. Whew.
I mean, they'd max out a btrfs/zfs system in 16 daysish at 1eb per. Perhaps this is just simply too much data...
Waste not, get your budget cut next year.