Re: Screw that.
Can confirm, buying a Scot a can of Iron Bru the morning after will make you a friend for life.
(Even if you're English)
6738 publicly visible posts • joined 23 Feb 2010
They do sell tat, but they do also sell a bunch of other kit, mainly components, that people would want to buy if they weren't cheaper online.
Mind you, when it's a choice between buying it from China via fleabay and waiting two weeks, or walking ten minutes down to Maplin and paying 120% of the price to get it now, well, then you have to decide how much you want that cable/converter/component etc.
They didn't call it the Bristol Olympus (as seen used in the Vulcan, and Concorde) because it was made in Kent mate.
"Is it a religious thing?"
Well, it seems like a matter of life and death to true believers, and basically impenetrable to outsiders, so yes, it is very similar to religion.
Mint does seem to have less of the bullshit that some of the more militant OS's (or rather their users) have though.
"If you control your own computer, it doesn't really matter if you can read the kernel memory from user space."
Until you go to a website that has some dodgy javascript running in user space (natch), which can then start reading stuff in kernel memory (or presumably anywhere else).
Unless you're writing or auditing every byte of code that runs on your computer, you have to start hoping that you truly control your computer.
Visible light signals would require an alien species that had eyes that use the same wavelengths as us, which might be the case if we're looking at a similar planet and sun to our own, but it's an unknown.
Perhaps a better idea would be to transmit in one of the absorption lines, where it should look out of place to an alien radio astronomer, and hence pique their interest.
"I take it the down votes are from the same type of twits that say the lame "happy holidays"?"
You mean the established church?
"Merry Christmas" as a greeting is relatively newfangled and is typically associated with Christmas cards and other commercialism of what was previously a purely religious holiday.
Not to mention that the root of the word 'holiday' is (fairly obviously) 'holy day', and that for most people Christmas time is a holiday season (in either meaning of the word).
Anyway, given that the bloody Christmas music and shop displays seems to start in flipping September these days, can you blame people for wanting as little to do with it as possible?
PS, I won't even start on the pagan origins of Yule, or indeed people celebrating Christ's birth in the winter, despite the information in the bible pointing to a warmer time of year.
It's a bit much to claim "the first new computer form-factor since the iPad" when a lot of the appeal of this device is that it's an homage to the Psion organiser.
The fact that it is very much not a new design, but instead a tried and tested one is the selling point.
"The authorities should be hit with a fine for releasing all that carbon into the air."
Don't worry mate, there's plenty of people growing weed who will ensure that the carbon is swiftly captured and turned into leaves and stems etc..
Anyway, what were you expecting to happen to the weed if it had ended up being sold to end users?
Ah yes, Exeter uni physics department, where, due to a couple of MRI machines, they have their own gas liquification plant out the back. What this meant for us students was effectively unlimited amounts of LN2, stored by the back door in massive dewar flasks.
Of course, as budding scientists we used it to investigate things, eg, can you touch the bottom of a bucket of LN2? (yes you can, if you're quick, and all you get is a slightly chilly hand). Another fun experiment was testing what happens when you freeze the various ingredients in someone's lunch box, with the extension of "what happens when the subject tries to eat their now solid sandwich". Of course, this was best performed under blind conditions, ie we wouldn't tell someone that their entire lunch was now two hundred below...
Depends on your nationality. If you're from the UK, then you should be checking the British Antarctic Survey jobs page regularly.
Otherwise, the US bases are managed by Raytheon (yep, that Raytheon, the ones who make missiles and stuff) (not any more), Leidos (a different US defence contractor). They have their own jobs pages.
If you're not from the US or UK, your home country might have their own Antarctic bases, or you might be able to get a job with the yanks.
Bare in mind though, there's many more people who want a job on the ice than there are open positions, so don't get your hopes up.
As kids we found porn under a railway bridge.
Not that unusual you might think, but this particular bridge was on a (then) closed line, in the middle of the countryside (at least a mile from the nearest village).
So some heroic smut peddler must have walked at least half a mile, in order to make sure us kids got a sex education. Thank you sir/madam!
You're mixing up the ME with SecureBoot. They're different and separate things.
So far the only machines I've heard of that don't allow you to either disable Secure Boot, or to add your own (non-microsoft) certificates are some of the Surface tablets.
So, if you want to install a new graphics driver into your kernel, either use one of the distros that uses a signed shim, or add your own cert into your BIOS, and compile your own signed bootloader.
I've not tried gaming, but the more recent dual-core Celerons are ok. Perfectly adequate for a point of sales machine, although the application that seems to require the most grunt is actually Outlook Web Access. Ever since Microsoft got rid of the low bandwidth version, they seem intent on creating a website that's as big a performance hog as the desktop app used to be, or maybe that's just what it's like in Firefox on linux.
You can actually collect some of the dust for yourself, from your guttering.
Just scrape out some of the mud you find there, and sort it with a magnet. They examine it under a microscope and you have a good chance of finding some tiny fragments.
"But don't expect SX prices to NASA to fall just because it's a "re-flown" booster and capsule."
Mainly because SpaceX (and Orbital Sciences) are on a fixed price contract, (unlike the 'cost plus' contracts of old that Boeing and Lockheed Martin got fat on.)
If SpaceX can reduce their costs whilst still delivering the cargo they're contracted for, then they can make more profit. If their costs are higher than the price they're contracted at then that's thier problem, NASA doesn't have to pay out any more money.
"It also has practically zero mass compared to the disk pack."
Really, because from the pictures it looks like it's made of cast iron. What did the disc packs weigh in that case?
"...Don't reach into the woodchipper with your hand to clear a jam even if you are 'fast enough'. Don't take the toaster into the shower with you..."
Look, anyone stupid enough to try any of these things doesn't deserve to be in the gene pool any more. Unless they really are quicker than a woodchipper, in which case that's exactly the sort of thing we want in the gene pool.
Same here. If I'm actually out and I need internet then it takes a few seconds to turn on LTE, but generally I'm only a few minutes from a wifi network, which gets the job done quicker. Leaving my phone on 3G really helps the battery life.
(the password for my local pub's wifi? "greatbeer", nice advertising there :)
I also use linux a lot, which was why my biggest question about this was hardware support. I've yet to find hardware that's less than 6 months old which works out of the box with most distros.
As for the mythical laptop with a twenty hour battery, isn't that still a myth? (Some older laptops are big enough to fit multiple batteries in which might get you closer though) And again, I wouldn't count on the power-saving working correctly under linux at launch.
"You pay in shops? Oh, you must be one of those people that doesn't sneak past when no-one is looking."
I get what you're saying, these fine upstanding companies have paid money to google with the assurance that their adverts will be shown to someone. If I adblock them, then presumably google still take their cash, but don't even have to cover the bandwidth of showing me the video.
Mind you, by that logic, if I walked out of the room when the ads were playing, I'd also be stealing? Adblocking is just a technical replacement for me shutting my eyes and sticking my fingers in my ears while the ads play.
I'm guessing this is primarily for the children of employees.
Hooray, we have company schools now! Do you think employees will be able to pay with OracleBux soon?
And at least little Jimmy wasn't trying to use noSQL for his backend. That kind of stunt should get you detention at any school.
Does anyone use DMARC and/or SPF for anything other than spam (and phishing) filtering?
We use it's presence on incoming mail for spam filtering, and make sure it's present on outgoing mail in order for our mail not to be flagged as spam by other companies. I'm pretty sure this isn't an unusual use case.