I don't think you can reasonably claim that the market for houses above 750K-1M is independent of the market for houses below.....
Sure, but they why kWh/h instead of kW? If you're inclined to measure the quantity of gas in terms of its energy, why not measure its flow in terms of power? (of course kWh/h _is_ power, but why denote it so strangely?)
Why would one presume that the reason has anything to do with computation error rates, rather than something obvious and mundane like "Graviton instances are more profitable"?
> If you talk to Dell/HP/other, they can advise you and sell you large storage appliances. Problem is, the larger appliances will only host 1 or 2 PB. That's nowhere near enough. This is just incorrect. If you talk to…
> Then you can mine the currency and provide them to other players in the game, either by giving it away or selling it. > “It’s a way to compensate people who really believe in us in the beginning,” Schiermeyer said.…
Please RFA more ;) "the third-child deterrent appears stronger among wealthier families" So this has both the most and least effect on families that have little reason to care about needing a bigger car (because they…
So, honest question, because I'm genuinely bewildered: why would you bother doing this, when Firefox exists, is perfectly functional, and isn't made by Google?
I believe it's the one that is now a crater full of water, just north of the siloes.
There are lots of games that run on linux these days. Personally, my wishlist has a deep enough backlog of linux-supporting games that there's very little risk I'll ever be "forced" to dip into the windows-only portion…
I'm not sure it's as much of a contradiction as you think it is. Noting "It manifests itself in the declining visit and posting frequency on Facebook across many cohorts", I find it entirely plausible that feeding the…
Doable, although annoying to configure correctly. Beneficial if you want to obscure your identity from the second VPN server (i.e. Twitter's, in this case, which ought to be logging connections)
I think this is kind of missing the "if it's inadequate" clause of the heuristic. In your example, the painful boots were clearly inadequate, and by the heuristic, it was time to upgrade to the best equipment you could…
It's important to bear in mind the small sample size: 4 women took the private interview, and 6 took the public. Still a compelling result, but not quite as incredible as it sounds in the article. I'm not sure what the…
> it might be better than fill a unit with a tenant who has a 15% chance of not being able to pay rent That's nowhere near the worst-case "bad tenant". The worst-case scenario takes months to evict and leaves behind…
Because neither of those have a history of volatility or risk.
1. Outer tmux on local/primary machine, for your usual daily use-case (i.e. managing multiple terminal sessions). 2. In outer tmux, ssh to some other machine you need to administrate. 3. screen because you need multiple…
Ah, yes, it is definitely reasonable to draw that conclusion based on people's disinclination to spend 100% the fare for a 10% larger, somewhat less uncomfortable seat, and/or 1000% the fare for 50% more space and an…
Would you support methadone being banned while heroin is available over the counter? Because that's the proper equivalent comparison to the e-cig policy.
I feel like you're missing other commenters' points. The thesis of the article is not "willpower is poorly defined". The thesis is right in the title: "Willpower is a dangerous, old idea that needs to be scrapped". The…
They haven't sold their ethics because they didn't have those ethics in the first place, and haven't ever seriously tried to pretend otherwise. Amazon is pretty transparently in business to make money, with little…
> The problem I find with remote work usually is that people pay you less than if you work onsite. Is this actually a problem, or even particularly surprising? Remote positions provide massive non-monetary benefits to…
You all do realize that (at least by default) ubuntu will keep old kernel versions around, and you can choose to boot them in GRUB, don't you? This is certainly a pain, but it's hardly the first time a broken kernel has…
Presumably, the classic mechanism underlying speculative bubbles: investors buying because they expect to be able to sell to other investors at a higher price, later.
I think parent took their criticism a bit far with "ad-hominem and smug", but the calling out of a specific individual makes me uncomfortable also. The issue, I think, is that the specific name doesn't really add…
From what I've read, initial attack vector is still not known for sure. Spear phishing seems to be the current best hypothesis. I don't think anyone's seen a mass phishing campaign. See:…
I don't think you can reasonably claim that the market for houses above 750K-1M is independent of the market for houses below.....
Sure, but they why kWh/h instead of kW? If you're inclined to measure the quantity of gas in terms of its energy, why not measure its flow in terms of power? (of course kWh/h _is_ power, but why denote it so strangely?)
Why would one presume that the reason has anything to do with computation error rates, rather than something obvious and mundane like "Graviton instances are more profitable"?
> If you talk to Dell/HP/other, they can advise you and sell you large storage appliances. Problem is, the larger appliances will only host 1 or 2 PB. That's nowhere near enough. This is just incorrect. If you talk to…
> Then you can mine the currency and provide them to other players in the game, either by giving it away or selling it. > “It’s a way to compensate people who really believe in us in the beginning,” Schiermeyer said.…
Please RFA more ;) "the third-child deterrent appears stronger among wealthier families" So this has both the most and least effect on families that have little reason to care about needing a bigger car (because they…
So, honest question, because I'm genuinely bewildered: why would you bother doing this, when Firefox exists, is perfectly functional, and isn't made by Google?
I believe it's the one that is now a crater full of water, just north of the siloes.
There are lots of games that run on linux these days. Personally, my wishlist has a deep enough backlog of linux-supporting games that there's very little risk I'll ever be "forced" to dip into the windows-only portion…
I'm not sure it's as much of a contradiction as you think it is. Noting "It manifests itself in the declining visit and posting frequency on Facebook across many cohorts", I find it entirely plausible that feeding the…
Doable, although annoying to configure correctly. Beneficial if you want to obscure your identity from the second VPN server (i.e. Twitter's, in this case, which ought to be logging connections)
I think this is kind of missing the "if it's inadequate" clause of the heuristic. In your example, the painful boots were clearly inadequate, and by the heuristic, it was time to upgrade to the best equipment you could…
It's important to bear in mind the small sample size: 4 women took the private interview, and 6 took the public. Still a compelling result, but not quite as incredible as it sounds in the article. I'm not sure what the…
> it might be better than fill a unit with a tenant who has a 15% chance of not being able to pay rent That's nowhere near the worst-case "bad tenant". The worst-case scenario takes months to evict and leaves behind…
Because neither of those have a history of volatility or risk.
1. Outer tmux on local/primary machine, for your usual daily use-case (i.e. managing multiple terminal sessions). 2. In outer tmux, ssh to some other machine you need to administrate. 3. screen because you need multiple…
Ah, yes, it is definitely reasonable to draw that conclusion based on people's disinclination to spend 100% the fare for a 10% larger, somewhat less uncomfortable seat, and/or 1000% the fare for 50% more space and an…
Would you support methadone being banned while heroin is available over the counter? Because that's the proper equivalent comparison to the e-cig policy.
I feel like you're missing other commenters' points. The thesis of the article is not "willpower is poorly defined". The thesis is right in the title: "Willpower is a dangerous, old idea that needs to be scrapped". The…
They haven't sold their ethics because they didn't have those ethics in the first place, and haven't ever seriously tried to pretend otherwise. Amazon is pretty transparently in business to make money, with little…
> The problem I find with remote work usually is that people pay you less than if you work onsite. Is this actually a problem, or even particularly surprising? Remote positions provide massive non-monetary benefits to…
You all do realize that (at least by default) ubuntu will keep old kernel versions around, and you can choose to boot them in GRUB, don't you? This is certainly a pain, but it's hardly the first time a broken kernel has…
Presumably, the classic mechanism underlying speculative bubbles: investors buying because they expect to be able to sell to other investors at a higher price, later.
I think parent took their criticism a bit far with "ad-hominem and smug", but the calling out of a specific individual makes me uncomfortable also. The issue, I think, is that the specific name doesn't really add…
From what I've read, initial attack vector is still not known for sure. Spear phishing seems to be the current best hypothesis. I don't think anyone's seen a mass phishing campaign. See:…