Comment Re:Why so many keyboards? (Score 1) 192
Hurray for KVMs, Remote Desktops and remote login!
I'm at 2-3 keyboards now, but would be closer to 100 without.
And spend half of my time just to get to the other keyboard.
Hurray for KVMs, Remote Desktops and remote login!
I'm at 2-3 keyboards now, but would be closer to 100 without.
And spend half of my time just to get to the other keyboard.
Read 'Micro' before hitting the 'on' switch
If it's analog, then it's behaviour is unique per chip, and so anything you build from them will be subtly unique. So "software" would behave differently depending on the unit it was running on. You thought 4 or 5 versions of Linux was tricky to support...
That explains why I always seem to hear things on my radio that other people don't
Transistors are analog. Transistor-transistor logic is digital.
Neurons are analog. What about neuron-neuron-logic?
Some seem to expect it quantum-mechanical or even completely non-deterministic.
Some are living up to that expectancy
Transistors are analog. Transistor-transistor logic is digital.
So right you are.
We could try to address our US friends as if they were from Nicaragua or - better yet - from Cuba. Same continent, same people, same culture, right?
But that might be offensive to Nicaraguans and Cubans.
What you speak of is a debt per assets ratio. We are quite good compared to the rest of the world I heard we are about 90 GDP to Debt, I was told it was more like 60 when I asked a family member who is an expert in this area so my numbers could be off. In comparison Japan is 180! Greece was close to 140 when all hell broke loose.
Which part of GDP is available to pay the debt? Without income (i.e. taxes) government has no means to pay anything. So you should relate GDP*(average tax rate) to Debt. See what happens to your ranking then.
Variables don't; constants aren't.