Comment Re:Deliberately bad? (Score 1) 279
Let me get this right-- you purchase this offset so that you can deliberately write bad code?
This model has worked well for cheat offsets, too.
Let me get this right-- you purchase this offset so that you can deliberately write bad code?
This model has worked well for cheat offsets, too.
If you still need a cable to connect your video sources, what's the point?
Or he'll pump the surplus electricity into the grid, and get paid for it.
False. According to his one-month update:
In California, you cannot sell excess power to the local utility. In other words, you can't do better than a zero dollar bill--if you're a consumer. I can sell power to the utility, but only if the net result over a year is zero.
As opposed to a non-binary computer?
Also, yes.
My main question is who can modify the source of the software they're using, and how are they verifying that the binaries are unmodified.
I realize this is slashdot, so I shouldn't have read the article, but...
All political parties have access to the source code, and digitally sign the executable code, and thus can confirm, at any individual machine, that the running software is the official one.
What is algebra, exactly? Is it one of those three-cornered things? -- J.M. Barrie