It’s a compound lift, so its mainly glutes and hamstings, but also back and core. But yeah, her form is pretty bad. The bar should be against her legs, her back should be straighter and her butt lower.
It’s a compound lift, so its mainly glutes and hamstings, but also back and core. But yeah, her form is pretty bad. The bar should be against her legs, her back should be straighter and her butt lower.
No, the Linux community is dimensionless. Physical objects cannot fit within it.
Hope this helps.
Oh, maybe. Is that how it works?
Apparently it was against the rules of that community and I was banned.
Sounds like they’ve done you a favour. Now you don’t have to see their random hater circlejerk community again.
Yeah, I just upgraded from a first gen i7. The performance gain is substantial, but less necessary than you’d think. I’d probably have kept going with my trusty i920 a bit longer if it wasn’t for lack of AVX.
Agreed. In the long term it’s better for consumers if there is competition, but that also means being an informed consumer, making good buying decisions and not being blindly loyal to any particular brand.
If anything, Intel’s lack of transparency should speak volumes. They’re hoping to just mostly ignore the problem until it blows over. I still think it’s more severe than they’re letting on, but only time will tell. They’re in full damage control mode right now.
Anyone who gets scared off of buying Intel CPU’s until they see how this plays out is making a sound decision IMO. Consumers shouldn’t accept this kind of behaviour.
On the flip side, this could also make for some potentially good deals on unaffected SKUs.
That’s wild. Did you need a special program to parse stuff out of the data stream? I guess it would mostly come in as http reaponses, so it wouldn’t be too hard, but still an interesting problem.
//TODO: remove perfctl
There, that should fix it.
I’d highly recommend hydrus network for that sort of thing. It’s exactly what it’s designed for, and is quite mature but still very actively developed.
Boss makes a dollar, I make a dime.
That’s why I use this app to normalize time.
Click to learn why this is happening.
No, I don’t think I shall.
Honestly, in a managed environment, there’s not really much learning to do. All the hard part of learning Linux is dealing with system issues, or when shit breaks. In corporate land, you’ve got IT staff for that.
The biggest hurdle would be learning libre office, but considering the average white collar level of mastery of MS office is pretty poor, the basics really aren’t that different in LO.