Comment Re:art people (Score 1) 413
I think the theory is to create spectacular-looking images to attract investors. Either that, or they're only faking a moon landing...
I think the theory is to create spectacular-looking images to attract investors. Either that, or they're only faking a moon landing...
Better the engine than me, and most modern engines have rev limiters.
He can upload his creation to his own iPhone without hassle
not unless he has paid $99, and got his parents to agree to the developers agreement.
Not sure where you got "only on a Windows box" development for Windows Mobile." Last I knew QT, and many other frameworks exist, and work on all windows mobile devices, and can be developed on most platforms. Don't get me wrong, Just because I believe Disney's Steve Jobs, is the root of evil, doesn't mean I think Microsoft is much better. Apple would never have released a public SDK for the iPhone had it not been for hackers opening it up first (sure big companies like EA, etc would be allowed to outsourcing development to India for the iphone...) No such need for Windows mobile, So I do think it is best for developers/geeks/informed to steer people away from closed platforms when possible, Since WinMo is slightly more open than the iPhone it is slightly better choice. Android is even more open, so that is a better choice... Doesn't matter if you want to develop for your phone/mp3 player, etc it is better to encourage companies that are run by people who are not trying to lock out the small guy by things like extending copy-rights forever, and take away as many user rights as possible, which is what Steve Jobs is IMHO.
Every outage you read about involves a failure in a feature of the datacenter that was not redundant and was assumed to not need to be redundant... assumed *incorrectly*.
No, I've also heard about cases where both redundant systems failed at the same time (due to poor maintenance) and where the fire department won't allow the generators to be started. Everything within the datacenter can be redundant, but the datacenter itself still is a single physical location.
Redundancy is irreplaceable.
Distributed fault-tolerant systems are "better", but they're also harder to build. Likewise redundancy is more expensive than lack of redundancy, and if you have to choose between $300k/year for a redundant location with redundant people vs. a million-dollar outage every few years, well, the redundancy might not make sense.
That's easy: Cancel all Comcast services.
I did that already a few weeks ago when they started hijacking DNS (and yes, I cited both that and the impending digital cable encryption as reasons why I was cancelling). The trouble is, the only thing I could cancel was the Internet service because I live in an apartment that has a bulk agreement with Comcast, and the cable TV is included as part of my rent. I really am a captive Comcast victim; my only further recourse would be to move! And to add insult to injury, while normal "residential" accounts get a free box, apartment bulk accounts don't, which means I'm going to have to pay extra even though I only use one TV. (Not to mention the objection I have to using the extra, redundant piece of equipment in the first place!)
Incidentally, I switched my Internet service to Clear WiMax. It's slightly more expensive than Comcast in the short term because I had to buy the equipment, but they've got a 3Mbps/$30 tier while Comcast's minimum was 6Mbps/$42.95, so I'll save money in the long run. And more importantly, it lets me avoid supporting the fascists at either Comcast or AT&T (the only DSL provider here)! Totally worth it...
I love it when moderation is actually funnier than the comments.
In case it changes, right now it reads
"Cockroaches survive nuclear explosions" = +5 Funny
- "and lawyers" = -1 Redundant
Right, but the key I think is...what is their retention level? Good God, how many questions can anyone have? Do they not remember from one day to the next how to do something? Or do they think their exact same question as one of the other 99 users is going to get a different answer?
How about a FAQ to help reduce the redundant questions.
I think I'd go "Postal" (TM) if I had that many questions coming in from such a small user group day in and day out.
Why is it that I feel the stuff I have setup at home is more robust than some "professional" shops? Is the world more like The Daily WTF than I've been lead to believe?
I'm not saying my system is perfect, but it's redundant in at least two locations.
Laptop<->Server<->Server HD 2<->Dreamhost.
My MySQL databases which just keep stuff like weather and temp (from my 1-Wire system) is dumped nightly and sent to my Gmail account. (It's also not a few TB server...) but seriously. How hard is it to toss in a few extra hard drives and do a rolling backup?
Because the new equation editor is vastly superior to the old one, and it was redundant code.
The Fail Infrastructure, that is, our Fearless Leadership, is an awesomely resilient and redundant system. The popular dissent is used as a tool to explain failure, rather than as useful input for promoting the greater good. Just look at the sheer weight of influencing factors and know the system will sink under he weight of profit-taking. I have a newspaper clipping from the early '60s of a certain tomorrowland fantasy they called Bay Area Rapid Transit. I will say no more.
If God is perfect, why did He create discontinuous functions?