We need a GDPR equivalent in the US. That's the only way this will change.
I'm way too invested in Chrome Sync to change browsers at this point.
Until you find something else to be up-in-arms about.
The silicon itself gets effectively no wear and the board is actually better because it doesn't get heat-cycled as much. The fans are in a bit worse shape, but those tend to be easily replaceable if they fail.
That's a nice word-salad you got there.
One of the biggest flaws of democracies is that they strongly incentivize policy makers to follow short-term gains over long-term goals.
No Honda or Toyota is going to drive anywhere near as well as the equivalent BMW. Even considering modern BMWs. Pay to play.
KIA/Hyundai have asked customers what they want for a couple years now and their cars are some of the best in their respective segments.
Personally, the only person I know that uses Apple music instead of Spotify or GPM works at Apple.
I'm guessing that pay scale would cover base salary, but not necessarily equity/bonuses?
I'd laugh in the face of anyone who asked me to work more than 40 hours for more than 2 weeks a quarter.
Still to see if it can do it over and over again like the sports cars it's billed to compete against.
You don't use AI for that, you use a bunch of sensors and adaptive power or braking vectoring. Calling some heuristics "AI" is a massive stretch.
Is there a plugin for it to use Chrome sync? I'm way too invested in Chrome sync to lose it at this point.
New York has really come a long way.
Fun fact: KSQL is the code of the airport closest to Oracle HQ (San Carlos airport).
IMPACT
Because it's an important tool for Machine Learning, which makes money from that (of which there's plenty going around right now) flow into it.
That'd go against Trump's business interests though. So I think it's highly unlikely.
Except most of your examples don't make "the same thing" as the companies you're comparing to. For the ones that do, like nVidia or Google. The technologies are orders of magnitude more complex now than when they took…
That's where the real money is.
That's like comparing the stability and speed of a Chevy Cobalt and a Kia Rio.
Those very deep pipelines are the reason NetBurst was very good at some tasks but not so great for general use. They made branching mispredictions be really expensive as a pipeline flush would result in a large number…
Apple does not have an x86 license.
The only worthwhile "Smart" TV feature is having Google cast built-in.
We need a GDPR equivalent in the US. That's the only way this will change.
I'm way too invested in Chrome Sync to change browsers at this point.
Until you find something else to be up-in-arms about.
The silicon itself gets effectively no wear and the board is actually better because it doesn't get heat-cycled as much. The fans are in a bit worse shape, but those tend to be easily replaceable if they fail.
That's a nice word-salad you got there.
One of the biggest flaws of democracies is that they strongly incentivize policy makers to follow short-term gains over long-term goals.
No Honda or Toyota is going to drive anywhere near as well as the equivalent BMW. Even considering modern BMWs. Pay to play.
KIA/Hyundai have asked customers what they want for a couple years now and their cars are some of the best in their respective segments.
Personally, the only person I know that uses Apple music instead of Spotify or GPM works at Apple.
I'm guessing that pay scale would cover base salary, but not necessarily equity/bonuses?
I'd laugh in the face of anyone who asked me to work more than 40 hours for more than 2 weeks a quarter.
Still to see if it can do it over and over again like the sports cars it's billed to compete against.
You don't use AI for that, you use a bunch of sensors and adaptive power or braking vectoring. Calling some heuristics "AI" is a massive stretch.
Is there a plugin for it to use Chrome sync? I'm way too invested in Chrome sync to lose it at this point.
New York has really come a long way.
Fun fact: KSQL is the code of the airport closest to Oracle HQ (San Carlos airport).
IMPACT
Because it's an important tool for Machine Learning, which makes money from that (of which there's plenty going around right now) flow into it.
That'd go against Trump's business interests though. So I think it's highly unlikely.
Except most of your examples don't make "the same thing" as the companies you're comparing to. For the ones that do, like nVidia or Google. The technologies are orders of magnitude more complex now than when they took…
That's where the real money is.
That's like comparing the stability and speed of a Chevy Cobalt and a Kia Rio.
Those very deep pipelines are the reason NetBurst was very good at some tasks but not so great for general use. They made branching mispredictions be really expensive as a pipeline flush would result in a large number…
Apple does not have an x86 license.
The only worthwhile "Smart" TV feature is having Google cast built-in.