Comment Re:Double Irish (Score 1) 825
US tax is based on citizenship.
No, completely wrong. I'm not a U.S. citizen but still have to pay taxes on my worldwide income. Wherever I choose to live.
US tax is based on citizenship.
No, completely wrong. I'm not a U.S. citizen but still have to pay taxes on my worldwide income. Wherever I choose to live.
The real problem is that women aren't treated like human beings in India.
And you think a federal lawsuit in the U.S. is going to fix that?
The alleged victim wants nothing but cold hard cash from a U.S. company, and so does the no-cure-no-pay attorney.
Pope Francis is the head of
A cult that believes their imaginary friend is better then somebody else's imaginary friend and have used lots of violence in the past to force people to acknowledge that.
As much as I think that anyone is entitled to their own beliefs, I strongly agree with the following quote:
Religion is like having a penis. It's fine to have one, it's fine to be proud of it. But when you start shoving it down my throat, we're going to have a problem.
I can't tell if you are being sarcastic or serious. But tape is no where near dead as backup media for business.
I'm serious, but you are right. In the near future, spinning disks will be used for the same applications and seen as the dinosaur of technology: backup and low-performance works.
The truth of the matter is that spinning disks are simply to slow for modern day technology. Compare your laptop when using a 7200rpm disk or an SSD. Compare your Oracle database query times when using a legacy storage vendor or an all flash array that can do 1 million IOPS . It is the performance aspect that matters in modern day computing. The bottleneck is storage, not your CPU, not your memory, storage.
It makes all the difference, especially in transaction-driven enterprises. But sure, for backups you can use spinning disks or tape. Just as our modern cars run on dinosaurs, for every legacy technology, there is still a usecase. I like to run my MSX emulator once in a while
Meanwhile, flash has revolutionized storage. We saw at least a 95% reduction in query times on our DB servers when we switched from RAID5 15K SAS drives to RAID1 flash SSDs.
This, exactly this. HDD will work just fine for your grandparents, while everyone who appreciates performance has moved on to flash.
The increased low latency read speeds combined with data deduplication, compression and instant off-site replication simply can't be matched by legacy spinning drives. It that is technology that is available today. Assuming that RRAM, as mentioned in TFA, becomes a generic technology that replaces flash, you'll have all the advantages of flash without the (very few) disadvantages such as wear.
NSA guy sees "metadata management" and has a wet dream.
That's not metadata as you think of it. It's the metadata associated with storage.
There are a dozen different memory technologies that "in 10 years time" will revolutionize everything.
It doesn't have to be in 10 years time. But did you expect the rise of the All Flash Array 10 years ago?
Legacy spinning disks will be as dead in 10 years as tape is today.
You dimwitted nincompoop! A mee-too moron!
Hello, random internet person, apologies if you feel offended. In no way was I trying to outsmart you, I was merely pointing out the obvious for the not-so-aware reader.
But using information thus obtained in court would be impossible
Two words:
Parallel Construction
Aren't they owned by News Corp now?
It looks like they're owned by Dice...
OpenSSH should be pretty secure
And that's the part that worries me.
Of course I have only been involved in the automotive industry for 45 years, so maybe you are correct
That's the core of your problem: you're to stuck in your legacy views of the automobile market to spot the trends and changes.
Surely there is a technological fix for this?
If I look outside the window of my little office in Santa Clara, the patch has already been applied. It has been raining all day!
And why did they give our local PD 145 flashlights worth $130K? What does a thousand-dollar flashlight even
I was going to post exactly the same thing, so you must be from Santa Clara County as well.
$896 for a flashlight... But what about the 6 camouflage sets for $26k? Do they fly?
The speed limit is c. It's the law.
Then I suggest we vote the current corrupt politicians out of office and get us some new ones that increase the speed limit!
If A = B and B = C, then A = C, except where void or prohibited by law. -- Roy Santoro