Absolutely beautiful scans. Thanks Met. Wonderful art that brightened my day.
It's a useful discovery. The real proof and utility is if what they learned from "mouse-heimer's" can be applied to human Alzheimer's.
A very good article, well explained, and I appreciate the photos of fine watches. As shown, date complications are very tough to calculate and there are many levels of features. However, the phases of the moon…
Consider the possibility that one diamond goes from the steering tube to the right rear axle mount and the second diamond goes from the steering tube to the left rear axle mount.
I agree, I would like an ePub to have a robust note taking and exporting ability. For instance, if I highlight in Chapter 8 "In 539" [next paragraph] "Belisarius" [next paragraph] "marched on Ravenna" [10 paragraphs…
The best identity I can think of is a hash-code of your DNA sequence. You cannot lose it like an external device, an email, or an implanted chip. Yes, there might be collisions in a DNA hash-code (such as identical…
Yes this is true, "the conversions did not generally work in their (employee) favor, although the old old timers were allowed to stay on the pension". Once caveat was that the IBM older pension plan was more valuable…
Photos or it didn't happen!
It is a very provocative title. I guessed Raymond Chen as well. Of course he delivers an interesting deep dive behind the title.
Would love to get general directions for a Blink camera.
Did very poorly at a popular Java programming video series: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFbBI85oTnY
That might be a good feature for kids clothing. This mycelium Sponge Bob onesie grows as you do. Fits ages 5 to 60.
That is part of his humor for the video. I laughed out loud.
I am reading "Immune: A Journey into the Mysterious System That Keeps You Alive" by Philipp Detmer (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08XTNHRR5/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b...). It is a great book for the layman, and explains a…
"Physical UIs also don't need to help the user navigate digital content. Hugely different to physical content." Consider the Beat Buddy pedal (automated drum accompaniment pedal) which can play lots of digital content…
Imagine when the processor and materials become cheaper. You could have very large hex boards that support many game maps and pieces. With touch control, it would be fun have gestures to move and combat with the stacks…
Additionally, IBM made several good pivots in the 90s and later. IBM embraced the world wide web and supported many web products. IBM did well for a while with RISC processors, AI, and cloud computing. However, I think…
Weren't the IBM Ambra, Aptiva, and Vista brands efforts by IBM to out clone the clones? As I remember, these IBM brands from the 1990s gave the impression of an IBM computer, but they were all made by third-party…
There are a few outliers in the HTTP/3 graphs that are slower than the HTTP/2 graphs. I might have missed it, but I don't think the outliers were explained.
It is interesting to me how many engineers hop from English ("3 inches to go on the rubber band") to the metric system ("400 meters per second"). Andy Weir touches on this in his book "Hail Mary".
A fascinating article. David Quammen's book "The Tangled Tree: A Radical History of Life" also has stories how DNA changes through more mechanisms than just mutation.
Also there are the possibilities for various questions and exclamations. Why did Jake ask "Can I have another biscuit?"? I was frightened when Jake shouted "Who are you?"! My trousers were soiled when Jake shouted…
This brings up a point related to the double-period/redundancy discussion above. In a slight adjustment of this example, what if the text were a question and the quotation were a statement. Would this be a good…
Some color pickers allow you to load a palette of names and they locate those names and values in the color picker interface. You can load common name sets (e.g. X11 color names, CSS names, Munsell names, Behr) and they…
I was a big reader of the rec.bicycles forums in the 1990s. That contributor Jobst Brandt was amazing in his reasoning on bicycles and their technology. Reading this brings back great memories. I did not agree with him…
Absolutely beautiful scans. Thanks Met. Wonderful art that brightened my day.
It's a useful discovery. The real proof and utility is if what they learned from "mouse-heimer's" can be applied to human Alzheimer's.
A very good article, well explained, and I appreciate the photos of fine watches. As shown, date complications are very tough to calculate and there are many levels of features. However, the phases of the moon…
Consider the possibility that one diamond goes from the steering tube to the right rear axle mount and the second diamond goes from the steering tube to the left rear axle mount.
I agree, I would like an ePub to have a robust note taking and exporting ability. For instance, if I highlight in Chapter 8 "In 539" [next paragraph] "Belisarius" [next paragraph] "marched on Ravenna" [10 paragraphs…
The best identity I can think of is a hash-code of your DNA sequence. You cannot lose it like an external device, an email, or an implanted chip. Yes, there might be collisions in a DNA hash-code (such as identical…
Yes this is true, "the conversions did not generally work in their (employee) favor, although the old old timers were allowed to stay on the pension". Once caveat was that the IBM older pension plan was more valuable…
Photos or it didn't happen!
It is a very provocative title. I guessed Raymond Chen as well. Of course he delivers an interesting deep dive behind the title.
Would love to get general directions for a Blink camera.
Did very poorly at a popular Java programming video series: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lFbBI85oTnY
That might be a good feature for kids clothing. This mycelium Sponge Bob onesie grows as you do. Fits ages 5 to 60.
That is part of his humor for the video. I laughed out loud.
I am reading "Immune: A Journey into the Mysterious System That Keeps You Alive" by Philipp Detmer (https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B08XTNHRR5/ref=ppx_yo_dt_b...). It is a great book for the layman, and explains a…
"Physical UIs also don't need to help the user navigate digital content. Hugely different to physical content." Consider the Beat Buddy pedal (automated drum accompaniment pedal) which can play lots of digital content…
Imagine when the processor and materials become cheaper. You could have very large hex boards that support many game maps and pieces. With touch control, it would be fun have gestures to move and combat with the stacks…
Additionally, IBM made several good pivots in the 90s and later. IBM embraced the world wide web and supported many web products. IBM did well for a while with RISC processors, AI, and cloud computing. However, I think…
Weren't the IBM Ambra, Aptiva, and Vista brands efforts by IBM to out clone the clones? As I remember, these IBM brands from the 1990s gave the impression of an IBM computer, but they were all made by third-party…
There are a few outliers in the HTTP/3 graphs that are slower than the HTTP/2 graphs. I might have missed it, but I don't think the outliers were explained.
It is interesting to me how many engineers hop from English ("3 inches to go on the rubber band") to the metric system ("400 meters per second"). Andy Weir touches on this in his book "Hail Mary".
A fascinating article. David Quammen's book "The Tangled Tree: A Radical History of Life" also has stories how DNA changes through more mechanisms than just mutation.
Also there are the possibilities for various questions and exclamations. Why did Jake ask "Can I have another biscuit?"? I was frightened when Jake shouted "Who are you?"! My trousers were soiled when Jake shouted…
This brings up a point related to the double-period/redundancy discussion above. In a slight adjustment of this example, what if the text were a question and the quotation were a statement. Would this be a good…
Some color pickers allow you to load a palette of names and they locate those names and values in the color picker interface. You can load common name sets (e.g. X11 color names, CSS names, Munsell names, Behr) and they…
I was a big reader of the rec.bicycles forums in the 1990s. That contributor Jobst Brandt was amazing in his reasoning on bicycles and their technology. Reading this brings back great memories. I did not agree with him…