The Disruptors: this article covers the incoming tech that will allow you to self diagnose at home, and we are not talking about heart rate monitors on your phone here.
Thanks for the vid, was wondering that in the back of my mind, but I put them in trust with just that, but they never used like automatic shut off devices like a keyboard or mouse though.
Its been like a few dozen days or so since I had to change my keyboard and mouse - They seem pretty durable for "expensive big boys".
Oh, yes, it's definitely possible. It was all over the local news this morning, too, explaining it the same way as the article. Apple has promised a fix later this week. I'm letting the iOS users I know in real life know about it, just in case they haven't heard.
Call me a cynic, but I would think if it was a bug recently introduced Apple would have made sure to declare that loudly. Seems like they are taking the tact that they hope no one asks because maybe it's been around for a bit. I'll be honest though, I haven't dug through a bunch of articles to get past the FUD and hype to see whats really true either.
Call me a cynic, but I would think if it was a bug recently introduced Apple would have made sure to declare that loudly. Seems like they are taking the tact that they hope no one asks because maybe it's been around for a bit. I'll be honest though, I haven't dug through a bunch of articles to get past the FUD and hype to see whats really true either.
The Marine Corps tested a skateboard unit in the 1990s
Before the days of the Iraq War made training to fight in urban centers a necessity, the Marine Corps was being proactive with the idea that the U.S. Military might have to capture some cities during a war. Urban combat exercises became a focal point after the Battle of Mogadishu, culminating in the large-scale Urban Warrior exercises in 1999.
One of the innovations tested in Urban Warrior was the development of the combat skateboard.
China's most popular app over the last few days has been one that's red in face and at heart.
With a scarlet logo reading "study" in Chinese, or "study Xi" as an ingenious pun, the app aims at shaping the nation's minds under Xi Jinping's presidency.
During China's Cultural Revolution, it was virtually mandatory to own and carry the "little red book." In the Xi era, the modes are smarter, and this will doubtless be seen as a "little red app".
BTW it's not in the Google Play Store, but it is in the Apple App Store for iOS.
They should have tried making them from a steel cores with layered plywood sheets on each sides wrapped in the appropriate layers of kevlar before they put on the trucks and wheels. Personal transport/armored firing position Mark1.
Groundbreaking new artificial intelligence text generation software built by a company backed by Elon Musk is too dangerous to make public, its creators say.
OpenAI, a nonprofit artificial intelligence research group, said their GPT-2 software is so good they are worried it could be misused.
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