3DMark will help you test your gaming equipment. Do you play on a personal computer, laptop or tablet? 3DMark has all the tools for your platform to test gaming performance. 3DMark will help you test your hardware in basic popular base and such resolutions as 2K and 4K and even super extreme 5 and 8K. This benchmark includes 7 pre-configured test packages for different configurations. Such as: tablet or smartphone, laptop with basic performance, gaming laptop, gaming personal computer and DR.
Yep. Amazing, isn't it? My Nook's in the same class of tool. And, we won't get into my Iconia Tab, or my netbook (Heh...) or the Laptop I've got. Sorry, I wish people wouldn't gee-whiz over this stuff. Seriously. You can actually GET the same basic deal Google's peddling with your described setup plus 3G/4G access for $150-200 purchase and $50/mo. If you subsidize it via credit card, it ends up being...wait for it...$20/mo for the life of the service contract and a $50/mo service contract from ANY of
Yes, this is just a rootkit. It's basically a remote access server that is clever at hiding itself. The attacker would have to already have administrative access to install it in the first place. This article is a hit job on Linux, and I suspect whoever wrote it is directly associated with the same criminals spreading the rootkit.
Exactly. The problem with rsilvergun is him, and people like him (basically all communo-socialist types) is they measure wealth purely in dollars. The problem is, money doesn't define wealth. If you try to use money to measure wealth, you'll get a wildly inaccurate picture of the overall welfare of each individual. And by that I mean, because people like him assume that money equals wealth, they perpetually think that we're in the worst period ever when nothing could be further from the truth.
Even your idol Karl Marx realized this, though in his own broken way. Basically his idea was what he called the labor theory of value, i.e. basically how much time you put into your work should determine its value. Though the broken part is that he's also wrong in the sense that not everything you spend a lot of time on is going to be equally as valuable as something you might have spent a lot less time on. Or that a lot of labor involves trial and error, where the time spent on errors can be and often is totally wasteful (the only value you gain from errors is in the form of knowledge, and even then it's not always useful knowledge.)
C has 32 keywords. The alphabet has 26 letters. There are 10 decimal digits and four key operators: addition, subtraction, multiplication and division. Just because you can do basic manipulation of these core character sets doesn't mean you can do advanced work with them. Linus Torvalds said that he was still working on the kernel because it's hard to program well. Linus is very, very smart and one of the top programmers in the world (Linux, git, etc).
I would argue that nobody (Apple, Google, Samsung, and friends) has had a compelling hardware upgrade since water resistance went mainstream. The adoption of that was a game changer, no longer do you need to worry about trashing your expensive toy if caught in the rain. Everything else? Mostly cosmetic. The end to end display is sexy but it doesn't really change how you use your phone. Better modems are nice for dick waving on speed tests but again, not a game changer. The critical apps I care the most (e.g., navigation, streaming music, basic web surfing) about worked just fine in the 3G era, which for us CMDA folks meant a max of 3Mbps, and usually a lot less than that.
Which, by the way, Apple has already done at least twice now:
- Every iPhone sold around the globe since the iPhone 8 supports the NFC frequencies and auth scheme used in Japan for contactless payments (Suica / Pasmo), where basically every android phone sold that supports the same MUST be purchased in Japan. Some Android phones may have hardware support, but you have to root the phone and hack some config files to get it to work, opening yourself up to all the other hassles that come with rooting your phon
it's not after 200k installs. it's after $200k of gross revenue. there are a lot of problems with this, which you can learn about by either thinking critically for two minutes or watching a youtube video. i won't waste my time going into detail, but consider 1) malicious installs by trolls, 2) that free demos of unity games would be impossible (they sort of rolled back/clarified this part at least, but it isnâ(TM)t very reassuring), 3) you have to basically trust unityâ(TM)s sampling methodology and anti-fraud claims about number of valid installs, 4) if you have a deal with a publisher, you may only be getting paid a relatively small fraction of revenue share after a period of time, but are now immediately responsible for the "unity tax" yourself.
tl;dr: in principle i agree that it is not that unreasonable to charge a developer a small per-seat fee. unity is just doing it in a basically suicidal way (it doesn't help that the ceo has been selling his shares at an increasing rate over the past year hahaha).