If your nodes disclose their affiliation that's fine but the client will avoid using multiple. If you try to do this in secret the tor project will attempt to catch you by looking for suspicious nodes that use the same isp and update their tor version at the same time and things like that, to questionable success.
The purpose of the company is to produce youtube videos not professionally written internal memos. In fact one might say that this is the core message of the document.
The traditional solution is to get your time by radio from https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DCF77 or your regional equivalent. It might take up to 24 hours to update but it will always be correct and requires no manual interaction whatsoever.
It will be incorrect whenever the time changes, so twice a year and maybe once more if you expect your microwave to adjust for leap seconds. Depending on the device it will also lose track of time if it looses power but in that case it should know to resync immediately.
Most typical home clocks will use this signal to set themselves up automatically, which is made easier by the fact that Japan does not have daylight saving time.
As I understand it the core thesis of this article is that any object which can be manufactured using semiconductor processes gets to share the experience curve of semiconductor manufacturing, which not only has has a unusually high cost reduction per doubling compared to other industries but is also already very cheap to begin with due to the large volume already produced.
Re [1], if the pressure is constant for about a second the software assumes that you aren't touching it and what remains is error in the hardware. It then compensates for the error by introducing a constant offset which exactly counteracts your motion. The only way to fix it is to let go until the software recalibrates to the actual error with zero pressure. Since learning this I've mostly avoided it without consciously changing my behaviour.
Very nice idea and great execution.
Sometimes it includes clips where the generated subtitles are wrong and the word is actually a different one with similar pronunciation (German heiß -> heißt for a lot of this).
Which brings to mind an interesting bias where it leaves out any examples that the AI transcription didn't recognise as the word, thus presenting only the "canonical" pronunciation according to whatever process trained the AI and potentially propagating AI artifacts into the speech of actual humans.
The fact that they were legally required to MITM their customers does not make them more trustworthy (in the sense of unlikely to do it in the future), just the opposite!
Of course that applies equally to any other cloud host (modulo jurisdiction games) but that does little to restore my interest in running my software on other peoples computers.
It's not about "other peoples computers" (there is no evidence of the system itself to be backdoored). If you are running on your own hardware in your own house, you still need an ISP that can do exactly this time of MITM.
Or, presumably, using other people's internet peering, since the MITM was outside of the XMPP server host.
I think jurisdiction games is all you have, because outside of that there's going to be _someone_ close to you network-wise who will fold when faced with a lawful intercept order.
yes it applies to pretty much any datacenter and carrier in the world
but that's why running thing at home doesn't help that much, because it also applies to carriers, too
and when it comes to sizing data it tends to not make much difference whether they physically size disk at your home or in the data center, actually if legal order for a sizure like that is confirmed by a judge it's normally applied to all the computers such a person has, both at home and in datacenters
Its returning the text that needs to be inserted in place of x to make the equality true. Since the parentheses already contain the inches they are not redundantly attached to the x. If you remove the inches from the query you get the result in mm, you would use
150 lb = (19.3 g/cm3) (4/3) pi ((x/2)^3) -> inches
to get the answer in inches.
He essentially stole the landlords house by vandalising it in a way that greatly devalues it as a place to live for anyone but himself, then getting it listed as a historic place so that the damage is legally irreversible and the house is sold at auction for a fraction of the previous value. Great that he got to live out his papier mache dreams but make no mistake, he did it at a cost of probably £350000 to other people.