Overall, I do like the speed of Ubuntu's updates. I was bitching about VLC not being updated. Then I realized that they were applying patches to a slight older version for whatever reason, instead of pulling in the new versions.
Building a website for our school's current affair society. I'm thinking of creating a sort of 'news wall' for the background by pulling headlines from, say the BBC and putting them as the background of the website. Good idea?
Which, by the way, can run Portal, but is better after a reboot.
According to Activity Monitor, running Mail, iChat, Xcode 3, Xcode 4, Photoshop, Activity Monitor, Steam and Portal is not conducive to smooth gameplay.
I have been editing some questions and answers lately. Suddenly, I wanted to edit a question and this message shows up:
Too many of your edits were rejected, try again in 7 days.
What? Seven days!? Why? Isn't that a bit exaggerated?
How about:
You have had 3 edits rejected today; pleas...
@jjj he needs help that SO can't provide. Like learning fundamentals. And how to read the FAQ that get shoved in your face every time you ask a question
What would you say if I came to you and told you, "I want to build a three-story house. I need to be done in three weeks. What should I do?"
@Hogan but I don't want to hire anybody. Can you please just get me started? I need something called a foundation, right? How do I do that? What materials do I need? Can you help me build it?
@badpssockpuppet another case of programming destroying real world jobs.
@Pekkasothertrollingaccount You need small pieces of colored paper called "money". You can get those for free from Google with this very clever scam trick. Do you have skype?
> This planet has, or had, a problem, which was this. Most of the people living on it were unhappy for pretty much of the time. Many solutions were suggested for this problem, but most of these were largely concerned with the movements of small, green pieces of paper, which is odd, because on the whole, it wasn't the small, green pieces of paper which were unhappy
I had hardly been using any data, so I had dropped myself down to 200 MB a month. Given this nonsense though, I've retroactively gone back to 2 GB, so I shouldn't have to pay overage penalties.
I still have no clue why all of that data was supposedly transferred.
@Pekkasothertrollingaccount That does sound like if Milk was hiring how they would list some of their ad, except there's no reason for Ryan to advert on CL
Milk is a white liquid produced by the mammary glands of mammals. It provides the primary source of nutrition for young mammals before they are able to digest other types of food. The early lactation milk is known as colostrum, and carries the mother's antibodies to the baby. It can reduce the risk of many diseases in the baby. The exact components of raw milk vary by species, but it contains significant amounts of saturated fat, protein and calcium as well as vitamin C. Cow's milk has a pH ranging from 6.4 to 6.8, making it slightly acidic.
Types of consumption
There are two distinct ...
Exact Duplicate: Is this question a good match for this site?
I've had a question migrated to programmers but I don't think its a good fit for programmers. If I understand the nature of the questions you get there.
How can you make a cluster run a task only once?
Should this have been migrated...
Related: Can we raise the awareness that question downvotes are now free?
People commonly comment on questiosn in affirmitive or positive tones, and don't upvote.
I started to make this question as a parody of the "related" question, but then it dawned on me that if we're going to raise aw...
So Condor is not quite the same as other "cluster computing" in the sense of protein folding or something, but it is designed to distribute tasks for execution, it just may not be what you need.
But your question sounds like a for real distributed execution engine would work better than what you're trying to mangle here, I just don't know enough about your environment.
But call now, and we'll double your order at no cost to you!
Can anybody explain why in scifi movies (for instance I'm watching Ultraviolet right now on SyFy) ceramic body armor is used, that fractures nearly immediately, and causes the wearer to be completely incapacitated when the ceramic is crushed?
Chobham armour is the name informally given to a composite armour developed in the 1960s at the British tank research centre on Chobham Common, Surrey, England. The name has since become the common generic term for ceramic vehicle armour.
Although the construction details of the Chobham Common armour remain a secret, it has been described as being composed of ceramic tiles encased within a metal matrix and bonded to a backing plate and several elastic layers. Due to the extreme hardness of the ceramics used, they offer superior resistance against shaped charges such as high explosive an...
Maybe I wasn't clear @wes ... why is it so fragile and why does it cause them to become incapacitated so quickly?
I know the reasons for using ceramics based armor. I'm quite happy with that type of armor. I think it makes a lot of sense. Also, my RPG of choice growing up was BattleTech where CeramoArmor was a type that was heavily discussed.