Everything posted by vMuz1c-♕™
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Bye , good luck in your life
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Voice computing is replacing the graphical user interface, Shawn DuBravac, chief economist of the Consumer Technology Association, said early this year at CES. Digital assistants will be integrated into many household objects, he noted. About 5 million voice-activated digital voice products had been sold as of January, and Bravac estimated 5 million more would be sold this year. Amazon's Alexa voice assistant software captured 88 percent of the global intelligent home speaker market in the last quarter of 2016, That widespread acceptance suggests that it could be in Alexa's power to disrupt multiple industries as the world increasingly goes digital and the Internet of Things becomes the norm -- including retail, travel, the automobile industry, customer interactions, e-commerce, security cameras, intelligent homes, and through integration with semiconductors, pretty much everything else. "Alexa's very po[CENSORED]r because of its open platform approach," commented Trip Chowdhry, managing director of equity research at Global research However, its success "depends on a smart company that knows how to integrate it into their platform," he told the E-Commerce Times. "Not every device using Alexa will be successful."
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Google appears to be planning a Pixel-branded Chromebook and a downsized version of its Home smart speaker, following in the steps of Microsoft and Amazon respectively. Along with two expected new Pixel phones, Google this fall will unveil a Pixel-branded Chromebook and smaller, lower-priced version of its Home smart speaker, Android Police reported Monday, citing a source familiar with the company's plans. Chromebooks typically have been po[CENSORED]r with budget-conscious schools and penny-pinching consumers, but the Pixel laptop may be setting it sights on a segment of the market that's willing to spend more, the Android Police report suggests. If so, it won't be Google's first effort to sell a premium Chromebook. It first introduced a Pixel Chromebook in 2013, and it offered an upgrade with a base model price of US$999 in 2015. Neither captured much market share. If Google should decide to continue its Chromebook line, price could be a big factor in its success. "Chromebooks have never sold as high-end notebooks," said Bob O'Donnell, chief analyst at Technalys Research. "For them to try to do something in the premium area would be challenging," he told TechNewsWorld. "That has never been a product category where Chromebooks have sold well."
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Name of the oponent: @#FiGhTeR Theme of work: Type of work (signature, banner, avatar, Userbar, logo, Large Piece): Avatar Size:150x250 *Text: Battle Watermark: csblackdevil Stop votes ( min. 4 - max. 8 ):8 Working time:24 hrs
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Microsoft earlier this week announced the next version of its Xbox line of gaming consoles, ahead of E3 2017, now ongoing in Los Angeles. The new Xbox One X, which goes on sale Nov. 7 for US$499, is slimmer than previous models and packed with power. With a 6-teraflop Scorpio engine, the One X has 40 percent faster graphics performance than its chief rival, Sony's PS4 Pro.Performance vs. Features "It's smoking," Jim McGregor, principal analyst at Tirias Research, said of the One X's performance. "They went for the most performance they could possibly get out it," he told TechNewsWorld. Performance prowess, though, is just one factor contributing to success in the console market. Traditionally, game content drives the purchase and upgrades of game consoles, explained Brett Sappington, director of research at Parks, Sony leads the console market in exclusive game content, and nothing yet from E3 indicates that advantage to have changed. "Though there are improvements in power, the Xbox One X does not offer any new differentiating features to drive purchases. Essentially, it is a more powerful Xbox One S," he told TechNewsWorld. "The PS4 still offers a variety of features that are not available in the Xbox One X, such as remote play and VR," Sappington continued, "and the Nintendo Switch differentiates itself with its motion controllers, haptic feedback technology, and TV-connected-to-portable functionality." True 4K Gaming One X has supersampling built into the console, which results in games with more visible detail and smoother edges, as well as more efficient loading times, according to Microsoft. With 2160 frame buffers, as well as high dynamic range and wide color gamut support, the console is built for true 4K gaming, the company said. What's more, game clips can be recorded in 4K at 60 frames per second, and screenshots can be captured in 4K. "This is a true 4K console, whereas Sony is using techniques to approach true 4K," noted Ross Rubin, principal analyst at Reticle Research "In practice, it's going to come down to what resolution game developers are going to support," he told TechNewsWorld. The One X offers an immersive audio experience that can put a player in the center of spatial sound The custom Scorpio engine in the Microsoft box burns chrome at 1172 MHz -- a 37 percent increase over its predecessor, Xbox One, and 28 percent faster than PS4 Pro. Since the inside of a console can get hot running at those speeds, Xbox engineers kept things cool with a liquid-cooled vapor chamber, a technology used on high octane PC gaming cards.
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Microsoft has decided to expand its support for Linux containers in the next release of Windows Server. Linux containers and workloads will work natively on Windows Server, said Erin Chapple, general manager for the server operating system, in an online post last week. The company also will extend Window Server's Hyper-V isolation capability, which was introduced in the 2016 release of the operating system. "This means customers will no longer have to deploy two separate container infrastructures to support both their Windows and Linux-based applications," Chapple wrote. What's more, Windows Bash also is coming to the next edition of Windows Server. That's good news for developers. "This unique combination allows developer and application administrators to use the same scripts, tools, procedures and container images they have been using for Linux containers on their Windows Server container host," Chapple explained. Slimmer Nano Server Microsoft also has improvements in store for the container performance of its Nano Server productm Chapple noted. Nano Server, introduced in 2015, is a purpose-built operating system designed to run born-in-the-cloud applications and containers. "The idea was to make it tiny, and allow each developer to add only the necessary elements for their specific micro-services to it," explained Ben Bernstein, CEO of Twist Lock "It's more compliant, stable and secure," he told LinuxInsider. "The image does exactly what the developer adds to it and nothing more -- no weird under-the-hood elements." The next release of Windows Server will focus on making Nano Server the very best container image possible, Chapple wrote. Customers will see Nano Server images shrink in size by more than 50 percent, which will decrease startup times and improve container density, she noted.Targeting Pain Points Reducing the size of an operating system inside a container is important for reserving resources for the primary application running in the virtual box. "Ideally, you'd want the underlying operating system to be zero, because you want it entirely out of the way," said Rob Enderle, principal analyst at the Enderle Group "This isn't there yet," he told LinuxInsider, "but it's very thin and gets out of the way as much as possible." The size of Windows containers is one of three pain points with Microsoft's implementation of the technology, noted Amir Jerbi, CTO of Aqua Security "The size of Windows containers compared to Linux containers is very big -- over 1 gigabyte," he told LinuxInsider. "This will reduce that by 50 percent." Running Linux containers natively on Microsoft server and Linux tools on Windows make things simpler for shops using both operating systems, Jerbi added.
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You probably don't get how incredible this is, so here's an analogy: It's as if a crooked referee put a bunch of lead on a racer who already was overweight and shuffled him to the back of the pack, but in the end, the guy finished first. You'd seriously want to look under his T-Shirt to see if you'd find Superman's costume. This isn't Apple coming up with an iPod or iPhone and flanking the market -- this is a firm that simply pushed on the gas pedal at a time when everyone said it was going in the wrong direction (PCs were dead, remember?) -- and kicked everyone's ass. As impressive as that is, there's more. This is also basically a brand new firm with a new focus, but people still see it with all the baggage the "HP" name brings, including the bad reflection from the massive mismanagement over at its sister company, HPE -- which, in contrast to HP, had all the advantages but couldn't seem to find the gas pedal. This is a perfect example of why a firm should consider changing its name -- and Compaq, a powerful brand it owns, could be the perfect answer. I'll expound on that and close with my product of the week: the Smartflower, which must be the coolest solar solution for your home in the world now. HP's Turnaround I'm simply amazed by HP's performance. It was clear when Meg Whitman spun out HP that she didn't believe it had a chance in hell of succeeding. Firmly convinced that both PCs and printers were dead, she saddled the firm with virtually all the combined company's debt -- pretty much stacking the deck to ensure that HP died while HPE succeeded. Many of Dion Weisler's peers privately thought that he wanted to be CEO so badly he simply didn't see that he couldn't succeed and foolishly took the job. Maybe it's good no one told him that because now, when you look at the two companies, HP is a stunning success -- HPE not so much. In fact, HPE is a bit of an industry joke now. I mean, how do you stack the deck like that and still find it impossible to execute? What is scary is that if Meg Whitman had won the California election, Southern California likely would be part of Mexico today. You can just imagine, at the split, the HPE employees looking down on their HP compatriots, thinking just how screwed those poor suckers were going to be -- and now realizing they're the ones screwed. At the next joint company reunion, HP employees should wear T-Shirts with two letters: The first should be "H" but the second should be "A," as in "HA!" It does show that strong leadership, focus, and simplicity can do amazing things in any firm. Changing a Company Name There is a rule of thumb in marketing that says that one of the telltale signs that a CMO (chief marketing officer) has no clue what to do is a decision to change the firm's name or logo. As with all rules, however, there is one big exception -- and that exception is when the brand is working against you. Now the brand "HP" doesn't have negative equity. The fact they sales are as good as they are showcases this. The problem is the image of the company and how it is trading. The big indication of this is that both HPE and HP made a recently published list of the most-hated CEOs, placing at No. 8 and No. 10 respectively. It is clear from the criteria that it was attitudes toward the legacy HP and HPE that drove the decisions. Dion Weisler is almost unknown outside of HP -- but in HP, as you might expect, he is a bit of hero, and HP's performance has been well beyond expectations. The employees there seem to love him, the channel seems to love him, and the investors should love him because they love anyone who can execute -- and man can he execute! These are the groups that picked the supposedly most-hated CEOs. My takeaway is that it is the drag from HPE and the history of HP before the breakup that is causing Dion to be so badly reviewed. In short, it isn't his performance that is hurting him -- it is Meg Whitman's performance that is driving the perceptions surrounding both HP brands. If HPE continues to underperform and be defined by market mistakes, executive instability and layoffs, HP and Dion won't be able to own their own image. Even though the HP brand doesn't have negative equity (by the way, that is when a consumer would pay more for a non-branded product than one with the negative brand), HPE is creating an ongoing drag on the image of HP, which must be hurting sales and company valuation. Granted, given how tightly printers and PCs are tied to the HP brand, such a move wouldn't come easily or cheaply -- but unless HPE can be convinced to rebrand (in contrast, it seems very close to dropping into negative equity in the enterprise space), HP's only fix is to bite the bullet and take full control over its destiny. Now, you wouldn't just cut the brand -- you'd transition it, and the likely first step would be to strengthen the sub-brands, similar to what IBM did with ThinkPad before selling the line and firm to Lenovo. But which brand
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V2 Text , Bruch Very good job <3
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V2 Text , effect
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V1 effect
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V2 border , text and effect good job
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guys let me join please
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More commercial off-the-shelf (COTS) electronics components such as commodity semiconductors, passives, and connectors could be purchased for Department of Defense (DoD) programs through online marketplaces if a bill that has been passed by the House of Representatives becomes law. The legislation is part of the appropriations bill for the DoD, which is awaiting action in the Senate. Section 801 of the National Defense Authorization Act of 2018, H.R. 2811 requires the administrator of the General Services Administration (GSA) to establish a program to procure commercial products through online marketplaces. The idea of the bill is to make it easier and quicker to purchase commercial products, including electronic components for DOD programs. If the bill becomes law, it means “all government procurement of commercial off-the-shelf items could be purchased through any online marketplace that meets the criteria set forth in the bill,” said Robin Gray, chief operating officer and general counsel for the Electronics Components Industry Association (ECIA). Under the bill, the Defense Department would be required to use the marketplaces selected by GSA to purchase commercial products when appropriate. The GSA administrator would be required to contract with one or more commercial online markets for the purchase of COTS products, according to the House summary of the bill. The bill defines an online marketplace provider as a “commercial, non-government entity providing an online portal for the purchase of commercial products aggregated, distributed, sold or manufactured by such entity,” the summary said. The GSA administrator would be required to choose marketplaces that are commonly used by businesses. The proposed legislation sti[CENSORED]tes that marketplaces must provide “the ability to search suppliers and products and identify such suppliers and products as authorized or not authorized.”
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Anybody who has ever witnessed a talented magician performs knows the feeling of bewilderment that can go along with it. Whether you are the type that can just sit back and be amazed, or (like me) a person who has to scrutinize every second of a good magic show, you have to admit that there is something both unnerving and entertaining about losing control of your sense of perception. In case you have forgotten what these sensations feel like, or you have never felt them before, today we bring you a TED Talk that has been one of my favorites for almost a decade! Magician Keith Barry can be more accurately described as a brain hacker. What is a brain hacker? Well, by the end of this TED Talk you might understand that a little better…or not..or maybe you will…or maybe not…See for yourself! Well, what do you think of your brain now? Every time I watch this, I have to resist the urge to find a logical explanation for everything I am watching, because even though I know the answers are there, my poor confused brain is too easily misdirected, so explanations are always just beyond my grasp. For me, these are the loopholes where wonder exists. When we go beyond what we know, just beyond our powers of logic. When it happens, we suddenly feel less sure of ourselves and the world around us. Is that so bad? Do we really need all of the answers? Perhaps the spirit that drives us to see magicians perform, or to watch a brain hacker on the TED stage over and over, is the same spirit that drives us to inquiry in the fields of science, mathematics, and technology. That insatiable desire to explore, and to apply logic to the mysteries of the universe, spurs on our desire to dig deeper, to ask more complex questions. So while we may be left scratching our heads after having our brains hacked, why not start to ask “why?”
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Hello Dear this Problem in compatibility with windows , to solve the problem follow me 1-right klick on instal ts3 2-choose characteristics 3-click on compatibility 4-you will see list of windows (choose windows Vista) 5-Then go to instal ts3 The problem will be Solved #Peace
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i am alone in my house , with out family + with out ts3
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Happy Birthday Mr.GFX
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<06:57:28> ">FuTuRe<": aissa ou knowit happends again when i saw you name i tought it was aisha i swear
<06:57:42> "-Sn!PeR-": hhhhhhhhhhhhhh
<06:57:42> "AiSsa": you are not funny
<06:57:44> "-Sn!PeR-": aisha
<06:57:46> "-Sn!PeR-": hhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh
<06:57:51> ">FuTuRe<": i swear i don't mean too -
n 2014, Cossman set out on an expedition to document Marum, an active volcano, on the island of Ambrym in the archipelago nation of Vanuatu. On this edition of Saturdays Around the World, we take you along for the ride, experiencing the beauty and power of life at the edge of one of the world’s most active volcanoes. We begin with a brief overview of what compelled Cossman to take on this adventure, and some of the remarkable images that came out of this incredible endeavour. Beyond the excitement of volcanic exploration, this project is also fascinating in its use of drone technology. The use of drones allowed the team to document the volcano like never before, gathering important information that allows scientists to study this volcano from thousands of miles away! Here is National Geographic with a look at the important scientific place this project has had. Though this last piece isn’t necessarily about the volcano itself, sometimes it is fascinating to learn what makes the adventurers on this planet tick. Here is Sam Cossman’s story, as well as more incredible footage from the edge of one of the planet’s most powerful forces… There is something remarkable about the spirit of exploration. It drives us to explore the world’s most hostile environments, the moon, and beyond. For those that will never make it to space, or find Antarctica or the rim of a volcano too much, there is an entire planet out there to discover. Travel allows us to connect with people and the places they call home. The more we recognized our shared love of this planet, the more we can do to collectively preserve its beauty and heritage for future generations! By the way, if you want to know more about the traditional culture of the islands of Vanuatu, you can check out a recent article we wrote about one photographer’s mission to capture images of traditional life before it disappears. He has a great piece about his journey to Vanuatu and the adventures that ensued!
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no , you are free test any number , idk what your pc accepted number test all numbers
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Hello Dear This problem of option the Video , you should to change it ! make just like that :
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Nano-tech is the science of shrinking things to one billionth of a meter. Huh?! That didn’t mean much for me either, until I found this fact: it would take 5 million nano-meters to equal the size of an ant! 1 It doesn’t take long to come around to the idea that this shrinking is the way of the future. Remember when the first flat screen TV’s cost $10,000 and weighted as much as a 4th grader? Now they are less than a half inch thick (1 cm) and we can carry a large one under one arm. How about the first mobile phones, when they needed to be permanently connected to a ten pound (4.5 Kg.) battery pack? The video we are sharing today is a wonder, start to finish, as David Poque – tech columnist for the New York Times – illuminates facts like