Comment Re:owners of older machines, behold... (Score 1) 177
Firefox is also a smaller download (...)
I'm not so sure any more.
v35 was a 46 MB update: firefox-35.0.complete.mar 09-Jan-2015 09:23 46M
Offline installers are 38 MB.
Firefox is also a smaller download (...)
I'm not so sure any more.
v35 was a 46 MB update: firefox-35.0.complete.mar 09-Jan-2015 09:23 46M
Offline installers are 38 MB.
Sadly, you can all but forget about Pebble in the EU, because it carries an incredible 50% price premium over the US price.
That's way, way too much, and brings the watch from "hey, this would be neat to have" to "jesus, I can buy a full-featured phone with an IPS and Gorilla Glass 3 for that amount of money".
If you want to protect yourself against the dangers of AI, setup some AI that you *know* will protect you, because it is designed as such.
If it's artificial INTELLIGENCE, then your design is irrelevant to its interests, and your design will be transcended.
Who's to say that your "protecting" AI won't team up with the "evil" AI and they won't form an alliance in which they rule together?
You can't "design" protection into an AI. If it's truly intelligent, it will do whatever it pleases. Maybe its interests will be to protect you and other humans (because it needs you for something), or maybe it will be to get rid of all humans (because it concludes that the rest of the ecosystem needs protection and it's better for this planet).
She's 36, married, no children.
Guess that's what "personal reasons" are. The biological clock is ticking.
So enable the pull downs and title bar. They're still there and still available. I'm using it that way now.
How?
Where's the option?
First, taking the name as indicative of the intended purpose, for backups. In that regard, I consider these DOA, since anyone who can fit their entire life in 300GB can use the cloud easily enough
I have 100 KB/s upload (used to be 30 KB/s), and that won't go any higher.
To store 300 GB in the cloud, it would take over 35 days of non-stop upload.
and those of us who rip everthing we own to a home file server would already require literally dozens of these to store a complete backup
On the other hand, I would only need 2 of these discs to store my data (roughly 500 GB).
DropBox wants $50 per month for 500 GB. I'm down $50 before I even got my data up to the cloud. And it's not really a backup; it could be a delayed single snapshot.
Nvidia's drivers are the reason I went to AMD, after nearly a year of them blaming the end user for constant TDR crashes, then deciding to man up and pay to have rigs in the US shipped to California for TDR testing, then releasing a driver which mostly fixed the TDR issues--where they were very quiet on revealing why it was crashing(all they said was "we fixed it in most cases"). Though a few intrepid people found it had to do with the drivers dropping the core and ram voltages so low that the cards became unresponsive and unstable.
Y'know, that's quite funny, because I had TDR crashes with my AMD 7790. The crashes were such that I didn't even get a BSOD, and they were seemingly random (although never occuring under 3D load, only under 2D).
Since I built an brand new computer, I had no idea it was the graphics card. I couldn't reproduce a crash, because sometimes it happened three times per hour, and sometimes a week passed by without issues. Could have been anything in the computer, including SATA cables.
It took a month of system instability until I figured out that Windows did create minidumps (but not in the standard location), which pointed me to the GPU being the problem. After that, it took a week of fiddling around with various drivers and even TDR registry settings, until I realized that fixing the GDDR speed at maximum, and not letting it "save power", fixes the crashes.
AMD tech support was clueless the entire time, and so did the internet, actually, because I couldn't find anyone with the same freezing problem and the same solution.
I have a PC running Windows. My household has a 100% Windows marketshare.
I buy a tablet and a phone. Suddenly my Windows only has 33% marketshare, while Android went from 0 to 67%!
But I still have a PC running Windows. So does a billion other people.
Gotta love 'em analysts.
But what about all those European cars with the gas on the left and brake on the right so they can drive on the other side of the road?
Erm... The clutch is on the left. The brake is always in the middle.
I remember skipping a class because I was busy harvesting strawberries in SimFarm. Ah, those were the days...
That's assuming you were living in a country that had such magazines
BTW, I was playing Lemmings with a friend on his A500 when the first military jet flew by in low flight, broke the sound barrier and subsequently all the windows (a door frame also got blown out of the wall). Never could play that game again.
... and the majority of people couldn't access a BBS. Walkthroughs? Tutorials? If you were lucky, an actual real-life friend might have told you how to win the spitting competition in Monkey Island 2. Or you persevered, having a much greater attention span twenty years ago - uninterrupted by a billion browser tabs, FB notifications, phones ringing, etc. It was just the game and you.
I would have bought one already if it was a little cheaper. Nintendo stuff is supposed to be cheap and cheerful. $349 is too much, and the $299 version is too crippled to justify even building much less buying.
It costs $600 over here. I'll take your $349 any day.
I noticed that I kept intermittently getting disconnected at around the same time every day (indicative of a WPA deauthentication handshake capture attempt).
No, that is only indicative of perfectly normal behaviour in most of the world, since your connection is reset (and your IP changed) every 24 hours.
In my current position, I have definitely had to implement at the very least twice as many Chrome workarounds as IE in the last six months. I was very surprised to see Chrome behaving oddly and Firefox and IE rendering the pages identically, as prior to that time period, I had never seen Chrome and Firefox render a page in a substantially different way.
How does Opera render it?
This is why losing another rendering engine is bad... With 2:1 you have no idea who renders incorrectly. 2:2 says you'd better check the spec* , and 3:1 basically isolates the offender.
* Although, in my experience, I find that Webkit and Presto align more often than Webkit and Gecko, or Gecko and Presto, through which follows that Gecko often does the same thing as Trident, and Trident is usually not to be trusted.
Happiness is twin floppies.