I thought that only applied to their consumer products.
So in the press release they mention the release of a 144 core two chip cpu. They also mention that NVLink is coming to ALL their products. Why weren't those in the headline?
I'm trying to find more information, I know they're was at least one study of a Canadian soldier who survived an explosion inside the radius that he should have died due to the pressure wave.
It has something to do with the pressure wave and how it changes with distance, since I posted that comment I've been looking for more information but I don't know the right terms.
I don't know about nukes, but large conventional bombs have an unintuitive survival distance profile. Something like <10 units away, you die, 10-20 units away, you can survive, 20-30 units away you die, >30 units away…
Can burn hydrogen.
The presentation says 60%
The g is silent. It's pronounced "if".
Use the sun as a lens and you won't need a megastructure.
It doesn't have to succeed to cause problems.
Here in Canada all the modem/router combo units from large providers are gigabit for LAN. In pretty sure that it's been that way for at least 5 years. I'm pretty sure new PCs and laptops have had gigabit standard for…
If it doesn't have to be a Pi and just needs to be ARM, then AWS, GCP and Oracle all offer ARM instances and the ability to have custom images. I'm pretty sure they all have options that cost less than .05 USD an hour…
Would have liked to see more color analysis, like a graph showing the number of distinct colours per icon.
Better pay, better working conditions.
Is there another game that supports direct interaction between everyone in a group of as many players as EVE supports?
If you look at the developer blogs for EVE Online, you'll have endless reading about massive scale multiplayer servers. Possibly the most technically impressive massively multiplayer experience
The example of a selfie is in fact, not a selfie.
For something to be considered clickbait it generally needs to be significantly deceptive.
Well considering that this behavior only appears in specific situations, I'm inclined to believe the bug claim.
This is a bug. The intended behaviour is to notify the user that tried to send the link. Doesn't make it okay.
Calling it a tungsten cube is incredibly accurate. Not very precise though. If you're gonna be pedantic then try to do a good job of it.
Every material more dense than tungsten costs more than tungsten, and the same goes for anything that even close close. Only thing you need to do to determine if you were screwed or not is measure the density. Since…
I find the theory that the NSA knows something about quantum computing that the public does not a bit compelling. Mainly because it is a seemingly simple explanation. The papers primary argument against this theory…
> The basic premise of the state is that it exists to protect life & property. Citation Needed
> culture of free expression once enjoyed in the U.S. I stopped reading here, there have always been inhibitors of free expression in the U.S. to suggest otherwise is to show one's ignorance of the history of the topic…
I thought that only applied to their consumer products.
So in the press release they mention the release of a 144 core two chip cpu. They also mention that NVLink is coming to ALL their products. Why weren't those in the headline?
I'm trying to find more information, I know they're was at least one study of a Canadian soldier who survived an explosion inside the radius that he should have died due to the pressure wave.
It has something to do with the pressure wave and how it changes with distance, since I posted that comment I've been looking for more information but I don't know the right terms.
I don't know about nukes, but large conventional bombs have an unintuitive survival distance profile. Something like <10 units away, you die, 10-20 units away, you can survive, 20-30 units away you die, >30 units away…
Can burn hydrogen.
The presentation says 60%
The g is silent. It's pronounced "if".
Use the sun as a lens and you won't need a megastructure.
It doesn't have to succeed to cause problems.
Here in Canada all the modem/router combo units from large providers are gigabit for LAN. In pretty sure that it's been that way for at least 5 years. I'm pretty sure new PCs and laptops have had gigabit standard for…
If it doesn't have to be a Pi and just needs to be ARM, then AWS, GCP and Oracle all offer ARM instances and the ability to have custom images. I'm pretty sure they all have options that cost less than .05 USD an hour…
Would have liked to see more color analysis, like a graph showing the number of distinct colours per icon.
Better pay, better working conditions.
Is there another game that supports direct interaction between everyone in a group of as many players as EVE supports?
If you look at the developer blogs for EVE Online, you'll have endless reading about massive scale multiplayer servers. Possibly the most technically impressive massively multiplayer experience
The example of a selfie is in fact, not a selfie.
For something to be considered clickbait it generally needs to be significantly deceptive.
Well considering that this behavior only appears in specific situations, I'm inclined to believe the bug claim.
This is a bug. The intended behaviour is to notify the user that tried to send the link. Doesn't make it okay.
Calling it a tungsten cube is incredibly accurate. Not very precise though. If you're gonna be pedantic then try to do a good job of it.
Every material more dense than tungsten costs more than tungsten, and the same goes for anything that even close close. Only thing you need to do to determine if you were screwed or not is measure the density. Since…
I find the theory that the NSA knows something about quantum computing that the public does not a bit compelling. Mainly because it is a seemingly simple explanation. The papers primary argument against this theory…
> The basic premise of the state is that it exists to protect life & property. Citation Needed
> culture of free expression once enjoyed in the U.S. I stopped reading here, there have always been inhibitors of free expression in the U.S. to suggest otherwise is to show one's ignorance of the history of the topic…