Comment Re:get ready (Score 2) 49
I don't know if I'm affected, really. But my property isn't on served by a public water utility; nor are half of the people in this county. Perhaps that's what you mean.
I don't know if I'm affected, really. But my property isn't on served by a public water utility; nor are half of the people in this county. Perhaps that's what you mean.
Pawn to Deep Space Nine. Check.
Those sneaky bggrs are forever altering memory to avoid consequences.
It's not what it lacks. It's because it uses newer components. As you make the transistors smaller and reduce the voltages, you increase the damage a cosmic ray strike will do. Yes, the chips are rad-hardened, but anything that gets through will have greater impact and have a greater risk of frying a component versus flipping the bit. The rad hardening will also have improved, but the risks will have increased faster than the protections.
However, there will undoubtedly be better error-correction in NH at circuit level, Voyager only error corrected the communications not the processor or memory. So I fully expect bit flips to be fixed silently, so I expect data to be of greater robustness. So in terms of quality of output, I expect NH to beat Voyager by a long way.
(I'm ignoring the efforts by the anti-science lobby to shut down NASA and the Deep Space Network. If they succeed, all communication will be permanently lost. But that won't be a technological fault, that will be a massive social fault on a scale comparable with Crusaders destroying the Imperial Library in Constantinople.)
Linux won't capture the desktop market unless Microsoft is broken up due to them repeating antitrust activity they have been repeatedly convicted of. But that won't happen because the US is too dependent on its supply of what's basically electronic heroin.
If you include Chrome PCs, that's been and gone.
Sun tried to go the Networked Computing route and bankrupted themselves.
Internet connectivity is far too slow and far too unreliable for most tasks. Worse, most apps still use TCP and UDP, despite better transport protocols existing. And IPv4 is still mainstream, despite IPv6's benefits.
The Internet is also not secure, due to NSA demanding the IETF withdraw IPSec as a mandatory requirement for IPv6.
No, thin clients with overpowered central servers (the mainframe architecture) was abandoned for good reasons and every attempt to return to centralised computing has failed for good reasons. Companies are now even starting to abandon the cloud.
>the scientific method
Science and climate hysteria should not be used in the same sentence
True! But "science" and "climate fact" are welcomed in the same sentence, cutie.
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