

Do they though…? I’m not sure they do.


Do they though…? I’m not sure they do.


There are some sensors that have each color stacked vertically instead of using a Bayer filter. Don’t think they’re popular because the low light performance is worse.


I’m aware of Darktable, but haven’t tried it myself.


Yeah, I think I’m mostly done with my current set of games, so maybe a good time to make the switch.
I think photography workflow might have some issues, but it’s probably manageable.


I have an older 1080ti or something like that which is still running just fine. And with the current prices I’m unlikely to change that.


I pretty much have to use Linux at work. I’m only still on windows for gaming but that will probably change soon.
This paper is apparently referenced in the Wikipedia page for HF: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrofluoric_acid#cite_ref-28
The pain isn’t from the acidity. It’s from the fluorine attacking your nerves AND bones.
He even has a screaming coach: https://youtu.be/Ugvw3pBbYqY


And after each of these, there’s been _more _ demand for developers.


The feeder will be used to force feed prisoners.


Gold, commodities, etc.


Agreed. Most likely a bad implementation.
For example, if the browser does time fuzzing, this could make the UUID less random.
That’s exactly how I’d consider experience. You think via systems(which include human interactions) instead of only technical aspects.
I’ve seen teams in really bad shape because the senior engineers fail to provide the right kind of leadership.
Cool! Good to know this software is out there.
It doesn’t seem like there’s a pseudorandom coding applied, so repeated patterns should show up visibly. I’ve never really examined it myself though.
I think you’re missing what at my university is the course: Solid State Physics, followed by a manufacturing course that may contain a lab.
This covers the physics of transistors and the basics from crystals, how to modify the properties of a crystal, and quantum effects. Then you will know how electricity affects a transistor (through field effect).
Basically if you have two wires that are open, then run a live wire near these two wires, the two wires will close. That’s a very high level overview of a field effect transistor.
Long runs of no changes is generally undesirable because it makes it harder to know where the reader is. So you’d want some type of coding to make sure you see changes occasionally regardless of where you are. For CDs, it seems like each byte is converted into 14 bits, where the longest run of zeroes is 10.


Honestly, still well worth it. And with pre-check it’s even faster.
This seems impractical to do over the whole country, perhaps viable over a small area.