"Microsoft is a developer-first company..."Boy, I can't see this being abused by Microsoft in any way.
Ha!
--Patrick
"Microsoft is a developer-first company..."Boy, I can't see this being abused by Microsoft in any way.
I dunno. I'll admit my bias here having worked with their tools for over 10 years, but their support of their developers is fantastic and Visual Studio is arguably leaps and bounds better a development environment than anything else on the market, especially when it comes to C/C++ development. And for single-person development, the Community Edition (which is fully-featured in most respects) is free, even for applications that you sell."Microsoft is a developer-first company..."
Ha!
"Microsoft is a developer-first company..."
Ha!
Oh, that's not what I was referring to:I dunno. I'll admit my bias here having worked with their tools for over 10 years, but their support of their developers is fantastic and Visual Studio is arguably leaps and bounds better a development environment than anything else on the market, especially when it comes to C/C++ development.
And with good reason:I'm much more worried about Google or Facebook or Amazon than I am of MS these days.
I'm guessing Microsoft had an "Oh, shit!" moment where they suddenly realized how much of the influence they used to wield has been eroded, and so they've decided to try and circle the wagons before they lose too much to be able recover.Big tech firms have been known to intimidate startups into agreeing to a sale, saying that they will launch a competing service and put the startup out of business unless they agree to a deal, says one person who was in charge of these negotiations at a big software firm (which uses such tactics). [...] the giants have tons of data to identify emerging rivals faster than ever before. Google collects signals about how internet users are spending time and money through its Chrome browser, e-mail service, Android operating system, app store, cloud service and more. Facebook can see which apps people use and where they travel online. It acquired the app Onavo, which helped it recognise that Instagram was gaining steam. It bought the young firm for $1bn before it could mature into a real threat, and last year it purchased a nascent social-polling firm, tbh, in a similar manner. Amazon can glean reams of data from its e-commerce platform and cloud business.
I once made a dry-ice based cooling system for *myself*, on hot Texas summer's day. Trying to save on AC bills, you know?Essentially, you're using dry ice to cool your CPU.
Might not work too well if you have small animals roaming around your house.
Only colder. MUCH colder.Essentially, you're using dry ice to cool your CPU.
Shoulda just done what my HS chemistry teacher did, and got yourself a VW radiator from a junkyard, mounted it to a window box fan, then ran tubing to his faucet and started putting maybe 1/2gal/min through it from the cold water faucet. Not amazing performance, of course, but better than nothing.I had a cooler full of dry ice that I put a copper coil in, inbetween the bricks of dry ice, then ran it with plastic tubes to another copper coil that I zip-tied to the back cage of a fan. Used an aquarium pump to circulate water through it.
Open a window in Texas in the summer? You're insane.Shoulda just done what my HS chemistry teacher did, and got yourself a VW radiator from a junkyard, mounted it to a window box fan, then ran tubing to his faucet and started putting maybe 1/2gal/min through it from the cold water faucet. Not amazing performance, of course, but better than nothing.
—Patrick
No, no open windows. Cold water enters the radiator, the heat from the room air is absorbed by the water traveling through the radiator, the warmed water then goes down the drain. No air need come in from outside, the fan is just there to increase the amount of air going through the radiator.Open a window in Texas in the summer? You're insane.
I'm not sure that tap water is cool enough in Texas during the summer for this to work. When I'm washing lettuce I have to add ice to the water to keep it from wilting.No, no open windows. Cold water enters the radiator, the heat from the room air is absorbed by the water traveling through the radiator, the warmed water then goes down the drain. No air need come in from outside, the fan is just there to increase the amount of air going through the radiator.
Boy, I can't see this being abused by Microsoft in any way.
An interesting counterpoint. https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/201...ying-github-needs-to-offer-a-better-solution/"Microsoft is a developer-first company..."
Ha!
--Patrick
I read that article, but don’t use Git, so felt I had no standing to comment.An interesting counterpoint. https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/201...ying-github-needs-to-offer-a-better-solution/
Texas doesn’t have to bury their water pipes very far down to avoid freezing, so by late spring the water is warm going into the house.I'm not sure that tap water is cool enough in Texas during the summer for this to work. When I'm washing lettuce I have to add ice to the water to keep it from wilting.
Come to think of it, I'm surprised Legionnaires' disease isn't more prevalent in warmer climates of the US. It's an issue in Michigan when your hot water heater is set too low, as it reproduces in tap water pipes between 77F and 113F.I have been corrected by my wife. Both my father and her father explicitly said not to turn off the HWH, because of laundry.
But still - it's really weird when the water comes out of the cold tap warm.
Well, Michigan isn't really the benchmark for water quality, is it?Come to think of it, I'm surprised Legionnaires' disease isn't more prevalent in warmer climates of the US. It's an issue in Michigan when your hot water heater is set too low, as it reproduces in tap water pipes between 77F and 113F.
It IS, actually. The Detroit water system is among the top, if not THE best in the nation. It was some gvt official with $$ for eyeballs that decided to eschew Detroit’s water and go all “locally sourced is better for us” and start this whole Flint fiasco.Well, Michigan isn't really the benchmark for water quality, is it?
I was going for funny, not true.It IS, actually. The Detroit water system is among the top, if not THE best in the nation. It was some gvt official with $$ for eyeballs that decided to eschew Detroit’s water and go all “locally sourced is better for us” and start this whole Flint fiasco.
—Patrick
There were a lot of failures in the flint crisis. If they had chemically buffered the water like they were supposed to, it wouldn’t have happened. If they had notified the public the moment they realized, it wouldn’t have been the nightmare it was for so many people, and probably would have been like the other hundred local water source failures a year that are under reported.It IS, actually. The Detroit water system is among the top, if not THE best in the nation. It was some gvt official with $$ for eyeballs that decided to eschew Detroit’s water and go all “locally sourced is better for us” and start this whole Flint fiasco.
—Patrick
We know that the demo that achieved 5.0 GHz was using a Hailea water chiller capable of 1770W of cooling
"We were told that on stage the presenter was actually meant to clarify that the system was overclocked, however the specific wording was not stated as it had been prepared. "Hey, @figmentPez here's some more info on that Intel demo system and what they had to do to get it going:
https://www.anandtech.com/show/12932/intel-confirms-some-details-about-28core-5-ghz-demonstration
One of the most interesting lines from that article:
--Patrick
To be fair, they totally DO have the ability to put out a 5GHz retail chip (on air cooling, even!), but the sacrifices they would have to make to do so mean its performance would be crap.They absolutely wanted to imply that they have the capability of putting out a retail product at 5Ghz.
Sadly, my truck is being watched by the FBI.I know how to achieve what you want in Adobe Premiere, but that's not exactly inexpensive. Unless, of course, you find an old copy that fell off a truck before they moved to the subscription model.
Most any audio software will let you do this, the tricky part is finding one that'll let you take the audio out and then add it back in again, which is essentially reconstructing the DVD. And since DVDs are steadily falling out of favor, stuff like that is getting harder to find.Any software recommendations for this one, or am I looking at getting a recording studio?
I found out when my puter got it's upgrade to a SSD what the problem was: CCleaner. It was deleting a lot of "reference points" that Windows Update now uses to figure out what my computer needed for drivers, and as a result, it hung my computer on updates.Me (From Before The Purge) said:What I hate about Windows Ten Updates: they tend to "freeze" my computer. I generally don't turn my computer off or put it in sleep mode, so when WinX updates, it goes into "automatic restart mode" - which causes my PC to go blank screen, but with the power still on.
The fix that allowed me to get the Fall Creators Update was to essentially disconnect all USB drives from the PC. This is what I think they call a "less than optimal" solution.
Handbrake allows for at least some form of dynamic range compression, but only works if the source is AC3 audio.Ok, so per Tin's recommendations, I've been using MakeMkv to rip our DVD collection to my external drive so I can actually watch DVDs again. Is there decent audio level balancing software out there for videos? I read through the handbrake manual and it doesn't seem to have anything about changing audio levels, and MakeMkv doesn't have anything built in, obviously. Even if I manage to get a stereo system hooked up to the TV, it's unlikely to solve things like the intermission concert footage on Tom Petty - Runnin' Down A Dream, where there are four sections of video. The first section is documentary about becoming TPatHB, then two concert clips, and then the rest of the documentary. The issue is the intermission concert clips are 30 TV volume settings louder than the surrounding video. It's like that on the DVDs. It's like that ripped. The first time I was listening to it I had to rip the headphones off my head it was so sudden and loud. Netflix apparently got around the issue by just skipping the intermission section.
Since I obviously can't trust professional audio engineers to even attempt their jobs anymore, it looks like I'm going to have to do it for them. Any software recommendations for this one, or am I looking at getting a recording studio?
And the @NSASadly, my truck is being watched by the FBI.