13000 years ago seems like a special moment for a few events. Is it possible that say a volcano eruption, or a meteor strike saturates the atmosphere and normal cosmic ray interaction with soot and so on can attribute to what they detect in trees?
That's a convenient tidbit put forth by who. Reject the premise that "replicating it" requires emphasizing this factor over others. If the true owners of Taiwanese fabs simply took less of the surplus share, the fab could be replicated here by spending more on American workers.
I’m not sure that, in a competitive environment where profit margins are small, that working vast fewer hours is going to beat an aggressive approach like Taiwan’s.
This wouldn’t be a problem, we just let Taiwan work themselves silly why we share in the benefit by getting better and better computer chips, but that doesn’t work if we want to COMPETE with Taiwan in this area.
Lol why do you think these moves are about improvement of the process? Like its said they have a fiduciary duty to squeeze profit out of their moves. Improvement of the experience for the customer is at least orthogonal to that.
I know it was a Gulfstream, but I referred to it as a “Learjet,” because that’s a more well-known term, and it really doesn’t matter to most of us mensch. It’s like calling a Fuji copy machine a “Xerox” machine.
It’s moving the data around that is slow… and expensive. Getting the data into the data warehouse, then getting it to the processors then moving it around to filter and transform.
Getting your data to the cloud is expensive, but then you can’t do anything with it because distributing it to process in multiple stages is too expensive and you’re already paying so much to keep all that useless data.
Just curious, would/do you do a lot of pinkie stretch movements i.e. to hit ctrl? I've remapped using autohotkey ctrl to caps lock on my personal computer and its a godsend to bypass this. I seriously think this should've been the convention. I wish I could enable it on my locked down work laptop.
Worth noting Microsoft actually distributes an "official" (quotes cause it was made by an employee seemingly out of their own desire, but it's distributed on MS's website) program that maps ctrl to capslock. Aptly named, Ctrl2cap [1]
Thought they really ought to just let you do this out of the box already. macOS lets you map modifier keys to other functions just in the regular old system settings.
It was, then as usual IBM mucked it up. The only thing worse might be the Amiga layout… letter width capslock to the left of A, and then a 1.25 width ctrl directly to the left of that.
I did a lot of changes, so which one would have sufficed is hard to tell (in exchange I have absolutely no RSI left).
I use keyboards with extra keys so the esc key was always mapped pretty near. With IME languages an ESC+language switch shortcuts is absolutely needed anyway (at least for vim users)