The actual article this story is about: https://www.pnas.org/content/118/12/e2018977118 (the link was there but buried at the bottom of the page)
I always see people point to 'just round the corner' future Proof of Stake systems when the energy waste topic comes up, but it seems like there are still a lot of big unsolved challenges with that, as well as new…
I keep seeing discussions of this include something like 'but it will all be moving to proof of stake soon', which seems to me a bit like arguing for how green air travel is by saying we'll have solar powered airplanes…
A flatscreen? as opposed to a CRT?
Also, while they might not change plan because of a reading of 93 instead of 95 - the article describes a bias of up to 8%, which does seem enough to be significant.
https://www.visualarq.com/ adds BIM tools to Rhino (and the total price of perpetual licenses for Rhino+VisualARQ is still significantly less than a year's Revit subscription)
At first I was assuming this was using streetview. I realise not everywhere is included on streetview, but when it is, it would be nice to have the option of using that instead of having to shoot your own video.
There's more to the story than that: https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/john-peel-allegations-m...
I think it's clear what they meant was not actually 'the most complex shape' but the regular polygon with the most sides that can tessellate.
Can anyone who has used both give an impression of how PhysX compares to Bullet?
Prostrate cancer? don't take it lying down.
One problem with this reasoning is that it assumes one can assign a fitness function to each single employee in isolation, independent of their different roles and how they relate to each other.
I find the non-official Android Libre reader app 'Glimp' useful. Even though I have the official one, I keep both installed, because Glimp does less smoothing/extrapolation of the readings.
The actual article this story is about: https://www.pnas.org/content/118/12/e2018977118 (the link was there but buried at the bottom of the page)
I always see people point to 'just round the corner' future Proof of Stake systems when the energy waste topic comes up, but it seems like there are still a lot of big unsolved challenges with that, as well as new…
I keep seeing discussions of this include something like 'but it will all be moving to proof of stake soon', which seems to me a bit like arguing for how green air travel is by saying we'll have solar powered airplanes…
A flatscreen? as opposed to a CRT?
Also, while they might not change plan because of a reading of 93 instead of 95 - the article describes a bias of up to 8%, which does seem enough to be significant.
https://www.visualarq.com/ adds BIM tools to Rhino (and the total price of perpetual licenses for Rhino+VisualARQ is still significantly less than a year's Revit subscription)
At first I was assuming this was using streetview. I realise not everywhere is included on streetview, but when it is, it would be nice to have the option of using that instead of having to shoot your own video.
There's more to the story than that: https://www.independent.co.uk/voices/john-peel-allegations-m...
I think it's clear what they meant was not actually 'the most complex shape' but the regular polygon with the most sides that can tessellate.
Can anyone who has used both give an impression of how PhysX compares to Bullet?
Prostrate cancer? don't take it lying down.
One problem with this reasoning is that it assumes one can assign a fitness function to each single employee in isolation, independent of their different roles and how they relate to each other.
I find the non-official Android Libre reader app 'Glimp' useful. Even though I have the official one, I keep both installed, because Glimp does less smoothing/extrapolation of the readings.