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81,672
So I bought a new iPhone 5 64GB and I enabled iCloud backup. For a while now it has not been able to backup my iPhone, since the 5GB of iCloud storage quickly ran out. I didn't feel like upgrading my storage plan, since there's anyway no storage plan that is able to backup 64GB. So I decided to store the backups on my ...
2013/02/10
[ "https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/81672", "https://apple.stackexchange.com", "https://apple.stackexchange.com/users/4700/" ]
Don't worry, you don't loose all your data. You can choose "Set up as new iPhone". > > Nothing gets synced or deleted after clicking this option. > > > After that, you can backup your iPhone. **Choose "encrypted backup"** to also backup your settings and passwords.
I was in the situation, and what iTunes displays is a bit frightening and misleading. Fortunately, iTunes doesn't do something that would be outrageously stupid. You can link your phone with *one* computer running the iTunes app to synchronize music, videos, audiobooks; all the things that are controlled by iTunes. S...
81,672
So I bought a new iPhone 5 64GB and I enabled iCloud backup. For a while now it has not been able to backup my iPhone, since the 5GB of iCloud storage quickly ran out. I didn't feel like upgrading my storage plan, since there's anyway no storage plan that is able to backup 64GB. So I decided to store the backups on my ...
2013/02/10
[ "https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/81672", "https://apple.stackexchange.com", "https://apple.stackexchange.com/users/4700/" ]
1. Connect your iPhone and run iTunes on your Mac 2. Right-click on the iPhone icon which appeared on the left side and click "Backup" 3. iTunes will now back up your iPhone settings, messages, emails, camera roll photos, etc
The backup doesn't include media since all your media files should be either in iTunes or iCloud. Backups for my 64GB iPad and 32GB iPhone only take about 3GB of backup space each and that's only because TomTom app had off-line maps that take over a GB. It does include photos and video so that could be an issue.
81,672
So I bought a new iPhone 5 64GB and I enabled iCloud backup. For a while now it has not been able to backup my iPhone, since the 5GB of iCloud storage quickly ran out. I didn't feel like upgrading my storage plan, since there's anyway no storage plan that is able to backup 64GB. So I decided to store the backups on my ...
2013/02/10
[ "https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/81672", "https://apple.stackexchange.com", "https://apple.stackexchange.com/users/4700/" ]
1. Connect your iPhone and run iTunes on your Mac 2. Right-click on the iPhone icon which appeared on the left side and click "Backup" 3. iTunes will now back up your iPhone settings, messages, emails, camera roll photos, etc
If there is backup files in your iTunes, you cannot sync again to backup it, it will delete backup with your new iPhone data. So you need to restart a new account in iTunes and sync back the data to iTunes to backup iPhone.
81,672
So I bought a new iPhone 5 64GB and I enabled iCloud backup. For a while now it has not been able to backup my iPhone, since the 5GB of iCloud storage quickly ran out. I didn't feel like upgrading my storage plan, since there's anyway no storage plan that is able to backup 64GB. So I decided to store the backups on my ...
2013/02/10
[ "https://apple.stackexchange.com/questions/81672", "https://apple.stackexchange.com", "https://apple.stackexchange.com/users/4700/" ]
1. Connect your iPhone and run iTunes on your Mac 2. Right-click on the iPhone icon which appeared on the left side and click "Backup" 3. iTunes will now back up your iPhone settings, messages, emails, camera roll photos, etc
I was in the situation, and what iTunes displays is a bit frightening and misleading. Fortunately, iTunes doesn't do something that would be outrageously stupid. You can link your phone with *one* computer running the iTunes app to synchronize music, videos, audiobooks; all the things that are controlled by iTunes. S...
2,963
I'm assuming that the end of the URL associated with a question is changed whenever a title is edited... is this correct? Does the original URL link to the edits page? If so, what are the implications to SEO for the site, since Google is considered the home-page of SO? Is this deemed an acceptable trade-off, since e...
2009/07/06
[ "https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2963", "https://meta.stackexchange.com", "https://meta.stackexchange.com/users/130373/" ]
[Does the question reflected in the URL change when a question title is edited?](https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/2963/click-here-for-ponies)
The ponies-free answer: Yes, it does change. But the original URL still works – it doesn't link to the edits page it links straight to the most up-to-date version of the question. So the question has two equally valid URLs.
76,391
I recently learnt that Route reflectors are an efficient alternative to full mesh IBGP peering in a large AS. Imagine a network like: D1 - AS1 <e> R\_P <i> RR <i> R\_Q <e> AS3 - D3 * D1 and D3 are public networks known to AS1 and AS3. * R\_P, RR and R\_Q are from AS2. RR is a route reflector. * <e> eBGP peering * <i> ...
2021/09/23
[ "https://networkengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/76391", "https://networkengineering.stackexchange.com", "https://networkengineering.stackexchange.com/users/62965/" ]
BGP generally assumes that AS is running an IGP, to interconnect its routers. When R\_Q receives a route that goes through R\_P, it will have to lookup a route to R\_P route through IGP as a part of BGP route calculation * if R\_Q cannot find a route to R\_P it ignores the route * at some time in BGP decision process...
BGP will not install a route to routing table unless its next-hop adress is reachable. This reachability can be achieved however you like. Maybe even using BGP itself to advertise this next-hop....but its probably a bad idea (since you don't want these addresses to be reachable from other ASes). Note that RR doesn't ha...
252,411
Manuals of several various electronic devices I came across recommend connecting their AC adaptor first into the device, then into mains. I always thought the reverse order is safer because I thought that connecting into mains can send a voltage spike into already connected device. Are power supplies (adaptors of lapto...
2016/08/15
[ "https://electronics.stackexchange.com/questions/252411", "https://electronics.stackexchange.com", "https://electronics.stackexchange.com/users/40616/" ]
> > Are both connecting orders equally safe in these terms? > > > Depending on the equipment, in some cases the answer is **no**, the connecting orders are not necessarily equally safe, and the order can definitely matter. There *is* a reason why you found that "Manuals of several various electronic devices I came...
For a properly designed PSU it shouldn't matter which connection you make first. For badly designed PSUs, both situation pose a risk: * connecting the PSU to mains first may be problematic if PSU is designed to **regulate under load**. Typically, without load a PSU can output higher voltage that specified, damaging th...
4,730,775
I must be missing something really obvious here: I have a user whose locale is set to America/Los Angeles. When I look in the 'users' database table, they have a value of -28800 for the timezone field. This makes sense; 8 hours before GMT = -28800 seconds. But now, when the user changes his locale to America/New Yor...
2011/01/19
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/4730775", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/373670/" ]
3rd party WP7 apps may only comprise of managed code. C++ is also not a supported language, even in managed form, at this time.
WP7 doesn't support c++. you would also probably need to recompile the c++ dll anyways, even if it was supported.
4,730,775
I must be missing something really obvious here: I have a user whose locale is set to America/Los Angeles. When I look in the 'users' database table, they have a value of -28800 for the timezone field. This makes sense; 8 hours before GMT = -28800 seconds. But now, when the user changes his locale to America/New Yor...
2011/01/19
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/4730775", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/373670/" ]
Neither P/Invoke nor C++/CLI is supported, only managed user code. See [social.msdn](http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/windowsphone7series/thread/096b66ee-23c1-47b7-a768-bc2ae9e94c7c).
3rd party WP7 apps may only comprise of managed code. C++ is also not a supported language, even in managed form, at this time.
4,730,775
I must be missing something really obvious here: I have a user whose locale is set to America/Los Angeles. When I look in the 'users' database table, they have a value of -28800 for the timezone field. This makes sense; 8 hours before GMT = -28800 seconds. But now, when the user changes his locale to America/New Yor...
2011/01/19
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/4730775", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/373670/" ]
Neither P/Invoke nor C++/CLI is supported, only managed user code. See [social.msdn](http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/windowsphone7series/thread/096b66ee-23c1-47b7-a768-bc2ae9e94c7c).
WP7 doesn't support c++. you would also probably need to recompile the c++ dll anyways, even if it was supported.
13,438
Which planets have abundant amounts of photoluminiscent matter? Photoluminiscent or chemoluminiscent whatever the glow-in-the-dark stuff it may be. Planets or bodies which have good enough the photoluminiscence(light absorb and then release) property.
2016/01/31
[ "https://astronomy.stackexchange.com/questions/13438", "https://astronomy.stackexchange.com", "https://astronomy.stackexchange.com/users/-1/" ]
Sorry, but none of the planets have substantial amounts of phosphorescent chemicals. Perhaps the closest to what you are thinking is the aurora, which can be seen on all the planets with atmospheres (to a greater or lesser degree) notably on the Gas Giants and on Earth. However, while the mechanism of aurora is simila...
**Earth** That is the only place in the universe we know there is stuff that glows in the dark. [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/2P0ZM.jpg)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/2P0ZM.jpg) More serious though, the only possible place I can think of is [Io](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Io_%28moon%29)...
7,331
What's the name of the 'rubbery' sealant they use between the bath and the wall, and why don't they use it in between the wall tiles? They use a hard grouting between wall tiles, but if the weight of the bath water makes the bath slightly drag the tiles down when it is filled which may crack the grouting (presumably wh...
2011/06/30
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/7331", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/3127/" ]
The bath, being made of metal, will expand and contract with temperature changes much more than the tile. So something as rigid as grout will eventually fail. Silicone sealant, or some other flexible bathroom caulk is what is required. Use masking tape on either side of the joint during application to get a professiona...
I really wouldn't use grouting between the wall and bath. Are you thinking of silicone sealant? Also when applying use a rubber glove with a bit of washing up liquid on to make it as smooth as possible. Also clean and dry the areas VERY well before applying.
7,331
What's the name of the 'rubbery' sealant they use between the bath and the wall, and why don't they use it in between the wall tiles? They use a hard grouting between wall tiles, but if the weight of the bath water makes the bath slightly drag the tiles down when it is filled which may crack the grouting (presumably wh...
2011/06/30
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/7331", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/3127/" ]
The rubbery sealant is bathroom (or general-purpose) silicone caulk. As to why they don't use it between every tile, the answer is that it shouldn't be necessary; except for the one row of tile overhanging the "backsplash" of a "built-in" tub (helps keep minor splashes and overflow from seeping into the wall behind the...
I really wouldn't use grouting between the wall and bath. Are you thinking of silicone sealant? Also when applying use a rubber glove with a bit of washing up liquid on to make it as smooth as possible. Also clean and dry the areas VERY well before applying.
7,331
What's the name of the 'rubbery' sealant they use between the bath and the wall, and why don't they use it in between the wall tiles? They use a hard grouting between wall tiles, but if the weight of the bath water makes the bath slightly drag the tiles down when it is filled which may crack the grouting (presumably wh...
2011/06/30
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/7331", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/3127/" ]
The bath, being made of metal, will expand and contract with temperature changes much more than the tile. So something as rigid as grout will eventually fail. Silicone sealant, or some other flexible bathroom caulk is what is required. Use masking tape on either side of the joint during application to get a professiona...
There're two options - silicone sealant and acrylic sealant, I only tried the first one. silicone sealant is very durable and completely waterproof, has perfect adhesion to most surfaces encountered at bath-to-wall joints. Beware that you have to check the fine print about whether it has adhesion to the specific materi...
7,331
What's the name of the 'rubbery' sealant they use between the bath and the wall, and why don't they use it in between the wall tiles? They use a hard grouting between wall tiles, but if the weight of the bath water makes the bath slightly drag the tiles down when it is filled which may crack the grouting (presumably wh...
2011/06/30
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/7331", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/3127/" ]
The rubbery sealant is bathroom (or general-purpose) silicone caulk. As to why they don't use it between every tile, the answer is that it shouldn't be necessary; except for the one row of tile overhanging the "backsplash" of a "built-in" tub (helps keep minor splashes and overflow from seeping into the wall behind the...
There're two options - silicone sealant and acrylic sealant, I only tried the first one. silicone sealant is very durable and completely waterproof, has perfect adhesion to most surfaces encountered at bath-to-wall joints. Beware that you have to check the fine print about whether it has adhesion to the specific materi...
7,331
What's the name of the 'rubbery' sealant they use between the bath and the wall, and why don't they use it in between the wall tiles? They use a hard grouting between wall tiles, but if the weight of the bath water makes the bath slightly drag the tiles down when it is filled which may crack the grouting (presumably wh...
2011/06/30
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/7331", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/3127/" ]
The rubbery sealant is bathroom (or general-purpose) silicone caulk. As to why they don't use it between every tile, the answer is that it shouldn't be necessary; except for the one row of tile overhanging the "backsplash" of a "built-in" tub (helps keep minor splashes and overflow from seeping into the wall behind the...
The bath, being made of metal, will expand and contract with temperature changes much more than the tile. So something as rigid as grout will eventually fail. Silicone sealant, or some other flexible bathroom caulk is what is required. Use masking tape on either side of the joint during application to get a professiona...
14,580
I'm aware that some fictional work is loosely based on others, consciously or not. For instance, **Lord of the Rings** has some common elements with the **Saga of Nibelung** from the old Norse traditions. Well, I'm writing my own story that has some common elements with a well-known book that is still under copyright....
2014/12/06
[ "https://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/14580", "https://writers.stackexchange.com", "https://writers.stackexchange.com/users/11352/" ]
Excellent question. The boundaries between different forms of derivative work are constantly being pushed and redefined. "Derivative" has come to be used mostly as an insult, but as you rightly point out, some works of fiction (I would argue '*most* works') draw inspiration from preexisting sources. In a way, storytell...
Your best bet is to break down the source into broad mythical elements and rebuild your story from that. Harry's tale is both a coming-of-age and a Hero's Journey, and you don't get much more archetypal than those. JKRowling admits she modeled Harry-Ron-Ginny after Luke-Han-Leia, and Lucas was working with Joseph Cam...
14,580
I'm aware that some fictional work is loosely based on others, consciously or not. For instance, **Lord of the Rings** has some common elements with the **Saga of Nibelung** from the old Norse traditions. Well, I'm writing my own story that has some common elements with a well-known book that is still under copyright....
2014/12/06
[ "https://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/14580", "https://writers.stackexchange.com", "https://writers.stackexchange.com/users/11352/" ]
Your best bet is to break down the source into broad mythical elements and rebuild your story from that. Harry's tale is both a coming-of-age and a Hero's Journey, and you don't get much more archetypal than those. JKRowling admits she modeled Harry-Ron-Ginny after Luke-Han-Leia, and Lucas was working with Joseph Cam...
Excellent question. It really depends on how you use each similarity. If you make it very obvious that your story has taken elements of the Harry Potter stories (-For example.) then it will be picked up by fans who will start to pick out more and more similarities. However, if you use a few subtle similarities that all...
14,580
I'm aware that some fictional work is loosely based on others, consciously or not. For instance, **Lord of the Rings** has some common elements with the **Saga of Nibelung** from the old Norse traditions. Well, I'm writing my own story that has some common elements with a well-known book that is still under copyright....
2014/12/06
[ "https://writers.stackexchange.com/questions/14580", "https://writers.stackexchange.com", "https://writers.stackexchange.com/users/11352/" ]
Excellent question. The boundaries between different forms of derivative work are constantly being pushed and redefined. "Derivative" has come to be used mostly as an insult, but as you rightly point out, some works of fiction (I would argue '*most* works') draw inspiration from preexisting sources. In a way, storytell...
Excellent question. It really depends on how you use each similarity. If you make it very obvious that your story has taken elements of the Harry Potter stories (-For example.) then it will be picked up by fans who will start to pick out more and more similarities. However, if you use a few subtle similarities that all...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Two massive pans (15 eggs in one pan at a time) on a low heat with lots of oil, yes its sounds oily and unhealthy but it makes mass egg cooking possible. Slow cook the eggs to perfection, just make sure to drain off the oil for perfectly cooked sunny side up eggs. I do this every morning and go through about 200+ eggs ...
For a large kitchen they would probably use a griddle for this instead of frying pans. There are griddles available about a meter across. As long as the hotel doesn't come down for breakfast *en masse* I imagine that would provide enough throughput.
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Two massive pans (15 eggs in one pan at a time) on a low heat with lots of oil, yes its sounds oily and unhealthy but it makes mass egg cooking possible. Slow cook the eggs to perfection, just make sure to drain off the oil for perfectly cooked sunny side up eggs. I do this every morning and go through about 200+ eggs ...
I probably cook scrambled eggs for about a thousand people a day. As well as cook to order fried eggs at the same time. I use a large, deep well, non stick skillet over a gas burner. Each pan pan holds about 3 quarts of shelled eggs. I keep the pan in constant motion and use a flat spatula to stir as the pan rotates un...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Chefs are really fast at cooking. It's what they do. A chef can almost effortlessly crack an egg with one-hand in about a second. Scrambled eggs would be pre-cracked and beaten prior to the cooking-shift.
I probably cook scrambled eggs for about a thousand people a day. As well as cook to order fried eggs at the same time. I use a large, deep well, non stick skillet over a gas burner. Each pan pan holds about 3 quarts of shelled eggs. I keep the pan in constant motion and use a flat spatula to stir as the pan rotates un...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Chefs are really fast at cooking. It's what they do. A chef can almost effortlessly crack an egg with one-hand in about a second. Scrambled eggs would be pre-cracked and beaten prior to the cooking-shift.
For a large kitchen they would probably use a griddle for this instead of frying pans. There are griddles available about a meter across. As long as the hotel doesn't come down for breakfast *en masse* I imagine that would provide enough throughput.
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
From personal experiance, I cooked on a flat top with six 8" pans for two to three eggs and three 7" pans for single egg orders. I had one frying pan with an insert for poached egg orders. Avoid electric grills, gas is much better, but a steam griddle like the AccuTemp is best as they hold a uniform temperature much be...
I probably cook scrambled eggs for about a thousand people a day. As well as cook to order fried eggs at the same time. I use a large, deep well, non stick skillet over a gas burner. Each pan pan holds about 3 quarts of shelled eggs. I keep the pan in constant motion and use a flat spatula to stir as the pan rotates un...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Chefs are really fast at cooking. It's what they do. A chef can almost effortlessly crack an egg with one-hand in about a second. Scrambled eggs would be pre-cracked and beaten prior to the cooking-shift.
From personal experiance, I cooked on a flat top with six 8" pans for two to three eggs and three 7" pans for single egg orders. I had one frying pan with an insert for poached egg orders. Avoid electric grills, gas is much better, but a steam griddle like the AccuTemp is best as they hold a uniform temperature much be...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
Chefs are really fast at cooking. It's what they do. A chef can almost effortlessly crack an egg with one-hand in about a second. Scrambled eggs would be pre-cracked and beaten prior to the cooking-shift.
As a chef, the bigger question I would have is how are they serving sunny-side up eggs buffet style without them breaking to pieces and making a mess in the chafing dish? I wouldn't ever put them on a buffet or suggest doing them for a large group but it can be done. Most likely they are baking them on sheet pans in t...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
As a chef, the bigger question I would have is how are they serving sunny-side up eggs buffet style without them breaking to pieces and making a mess in the chafing dish? I wouldn't ever put them on a buffet or suggest doing them for a large group but it can be done. Most likely they are baking them on sheet pans in t...
I probably cook scrambled eggs for about a thousand people a day. As well as cook to order fried eggs at the same time. I use a large, deep well, non stick skillet over a gas burner. Each pan pan holds about 3 quarts of shelled eggs. I keep the pan in constant motion and use a flat spatula to stir as the pan rotates un...
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
From personal experiance, I cooked on a flat top with six 8" pans for two to three eggs and three 7" pans for single egg orders. I had one frying pan with an insert for poached egg orders. Avoid electric grills, gas is much better, but a steam griddle like the AccuTemp is best as they hold a uniform temperature much be...
For a large kitchen they would probably use a griddle for this instead of frying pans. There are griddles available about a meter across. As long as the hotel doesn't come down for breakfast *en masse* I imagine that would provide enough throughput.
5,087
I'm currently at a hotel in Spain. We are having a buffet breakfast and one of the meals are sunny-side-up fried eggs. I estimate they probably fry several hundred eggs per breakfast. I wondered how they pull it off in the kitchen, especially the "breaking eggs" part. I can imagine two extremes: 1. A cook is breaking...
2010/08/13
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/5087", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/1833/" ]
As a chef, the bigger question I would have is how are they serving sunny-side up eggs buffet style without them breaking to pieces and making a mess in the chafing dish? I wouldn't ever put them on a buffet or suggest doing them for a large group but it can be done. Most likely they are baking them on sheet pans in t...
For a large kitchen they would probably use a griddle for this instead of frying pans. There are griddles available about a meter across. As long as the hotel doesn't come down for breakfast *en masse* I imagine that would provide enough throughput.
28,958
Were they not cleansed yet because Christ hadn't appeared yet? Or is it just saying that idolatry was still among them? > > Joshua 22:17 (KJV) Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us, from which we > are not cleansed until this day, although there was a plague in the > congregation of the LORD > > >
2017/08/10
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/28958", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/20578/" ]
Cleanse Yourself ---------------- On the surface, the answer is straight-forward: the people had not cleansed themselves by getting rid of the idols and/or jewelry of foreign gods. Shortly after the incident at the Jordan, Joshua tells the people: > > Now therefore fear the LORD and serve him in sincerity and in f...
Interesting question...thanks. 1. There is no doubt, for me, that the first Peor episode was atoned for (exceedingly). a. Num. 25:3, "And Israel joined himself unto Baalpeor: and the anger of the LORD was kindled against Israel. b. Num. 25:13 - "And he (Phinehas) shall have it, and his seed after him, [even] the cov...
28,958
Were they not cleansed yet because Christ hadn't appeared yet? Or is it just saying that idolatry was still among them? > > Joshua 22:17 (KJV) Is the iniquity of Peor too little for us, from which we > are not cleansed until this day, although there was a plague in the > congregation of the LORD > > >
2017/08/10
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/28958", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/20578/" ]
Cleanse Yourself ---------------- On the surface, the answer is straight-forward: the people had not cleansed themselves by getting rid of the idols and/or jewelry of foreign gods. Shortly after the incident at the Jordan, Joshua tells the people: > > Now therefore fear the LORD and serve him in sincerity and in f...
* an atonement is not effectual. An atonement is an expression of remorse and an appeal for forgiveness but does not "pay off" God. God must forgive sins. And God is faithful to forgive and not despise a contrite heart. But he does not owe forgiveness just because an atonement was made * Phineas was forgiven for was co...
54,887
As the question states, what are the benefits of doing this given the following information/constraints: 1. I will not be using partitioning 2. I will not be placing the tablespaces and its datafiles into different hard disk drives 3. My schema has lots (maybe around 50 to 100) of small tables and there are only about...
2013/12/12
[ "https://dba.stackexchange.com/questions/54887", "https://dba.stackexchange.com", "https://dba.stackexchange.com/users/18333/" ]
Minimal performance benefit, the only benefit in this regard is from reduced fragmentation. But Oracle and most filesystems handle this much better these days than in the past; Oracle handles this better with "automatic segment space management" and the Oracle "filesystem" ASM, though you don't need to use the latter. ...
Indexes "grow" differently than tables, also when you rebuild them (for various reasons) your tablespace can get easily fragmented. It's always good idea to keep these separately. Also when usign uniform extent allocation you have no other option that to have at least to tablespaces for small tables (reference, enumer...
50,881,542
Back again with another Racket question. New to higher order functions in general, so give me some leeway. Currently trying to find the alternating sum using the foldr/foldl functions and not recursion. e.g. (altsum '(1 3 5 7)) should equal 1 - 3 + 5 - 7, which totals to -4. I've thought about a few possible ways to...
2018/06/15
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/50881542", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/2980932/" ]
We currently don't have that feature of batch testing using Programmatic API. It might be considered in future. The only way for batch testing currently is through [UI](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/cognitive-services/luis/train-test) as you have mentioned earlier. And you can submit a [feature request](https...
This is the solution. The updated API list is given here in [link](https://westus.dev.cognitive.microsoft.com/docs/services/5819c76f40a6350ce09de1ac/operations/5819c77140a63516d81aee78).Here there are two methods (Get)Get predictions from endpoint and (Post) Get predictions from endpoint.
46,356
Why does the Las Vegas Airport have three control towers? I just noticed, and I find it a little weird. There should only be one... Does anybody know details on how this came about? And how they work like that? [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg) ...
2017/12/05
[ "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/46356", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/users/5588/" ]
One of those is the old tower, built in 1983, and scheduled for demolition. (in the bottom left of the picture) The location and height of the old tower created blind spots, which were covered by the much shorter ground control tower attached to the D Gates. (upper right of the picture) The new tower is in a bette...
airports which have existed for many years often have a succession of control towers which were built in each revision of the airport, and in some cases the older ones are allowed to stand. I look for them each time I land at an unfamiliar airport- the more towers, the older the airport, and the more history there is i...
46,356
Why does the Las Vegas Airport have three control towers? I just noticed, and I find it a little weird. There should only be one... Does anybody know details on how this came about? And how they work like that? [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg) ...
2017/12/05
[ "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/46356", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/users/5588/" ]
One of those is the old tower, built in 1983, and scheduled for demolition. (in the bottom left of the picture) The location and height of the old tower created blind spots, which were covered by the much shorter ground control tower attached to the D Gates. (upper right of the picture) The new tower is in a bette...
Previous commenters are correct that old towers can stay around well after a new one is put up. Look at IAD. I'd also add that sometimes there are ramp towers at airports and they can look like regular air traffic control towers.
46,356
Why does the Las Vegas Airport have three control towers? I just noticed, and I find it a little weird. There should only be one... Does anybody know details on how this came about? And how they work like that? [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/Zri2z.jpg) ...
2017/12/05
[ "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/questions/46356", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com", "https://aviation.stackexchange.com/users/5588/" ]
One of those is the old tower, built in 1983, and scheduled for demolition. (in the bottom left of the picture) The location and height of the old tower created blind spots, which were covered by the much shorter ground control tower attached to the D Gates. (upper right of the picture) The new tower is in a bette...
The mini tower is the East Ramp Control tower, used to park planes at assigned gates. There is another Ramp Control Tower situated on the south end of the terminal 1 garage that monitors the west airfield.
52,159,053
I am trying to use my gpu NVIDIA GEFORCE GTX 1050, with tensorflow to train a neural network. I have tried with different code examples of different neural networks and the result is always a GPU utilization of 8% with computation that are much slower than with CPU. From this screen you can see the utilization during t...
2018/09/04
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/52159053", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/8901144/" ]
Sometimes GPU utilization is bounded by HDD speed. Especially when training data does not fit into RAM and consists of millions of images I observed that one epoch training takes exactly the same time as reading all data from disk. Changing hdd with ssd or even nvm drive proportionally increased tensorflow training spe...
It depends on your application.It is not unusual to have low GPU utilization.Try increasing the batch size
25,915
For example, a man's name is Jeff Smith. My question is: When should I call him "Jeff"? When should I call him "Smith"? When should I call him "Jeff Smith"? in western.
2011/05/18
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/25915", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/3907/" ]
In general US usage, you would use "Jeff" if you are friends, contemporaries, or Jeff has asked you to use his first name. First names are often used in casual settings. You would use "Mr. Smith" (or "Dr. Smith" or other appropriate title) if you are colleagues, younger than Mr. Smith, or in a formal or business sett...
Usually you refer to someone by their last name when it is more *formal* so, if they were your boss, or some other form of authority or perhaps, someone you just met. You use someone's first name more casually, if you know them personally better.
59,306
I have some difficulty understanding the position of adjectives. In English I have to put the adjective before the referred name (e.g., *I'm an Italian man*). In some languages (as Italian or Ancient Greek), the adjective (or another grammatical element) can have two positions: 1. attributive: "gli uomini buoni" (the...
2012/02/26
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/59306", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/14116/" ]
The terms seem appropriate and may be traditional for Italian grammar, but they're not standard or useful for English. Forget the terms. In Spanish, there's a similar phenomenon, with occasional modification of form, and usually some of meaning: * *un hombre grande* 'a big man' * *un gran hombre* 'a great man' The I...
This is is the old problem of “May I introduce you to *mi bonita esposa* or to *mi esposa bonita*?” Or if you prefer French, to *ma jolie femme* vs *ma femme jolie*. Like Latin, Spanish (and to a lesser extent the other Romance tongues) use flexible word order where in English we use speech stress. You can only rarely...
59,306
I have some difficulty understanding the position of adjectives. In English I have to put the adjective before the referred name (e.g., *I'm an Italian man*). In some languages (as Italian or Ancient Greek), the adjective (or another grammatical element) can have two positions: 1. attributive: "gli uomini buoni" (the...
2012/02/26
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/59306", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/14116/" ]
The terms seem appropriate and may be traditional for Italian grammar, but they're not standard or useful for English. Forget the terms. In Spanish, there's a similar phenomenon, with occasional modification of form, and usually some of meaning: * *un hombre grande* 'a big man' * *un gran hombre* 'a great man' The I...
In English, adjectives may have three different positions. But, using any adjective at any position is not possible. 1) Attributive position - before noun. Most adjectives go before noun. > > Green tree > > Happy girl > > > 2) Predicative position - after verbs. > > The tree is green. > > The girl is ...
59,306
I have some difficulty understanding the position of adjectives. In English I have to put the adjective before the referred name (e.g., *I'm an Italian man*). In some languages (as Italian or Ancient Greek), the adjective (or another grammatical element) can have two positions: 1. attributive: "gli uomini buoni" (the...
2012/02/26
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/59306", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/14116/" ]
In English, adjectives may have three different positions. But, using any adjective at any position is not possible. 1) Attributive position - before noun. Most adjectives go before noun. > > Green tree > > Happy girl > > > 2) Predicative position - after verbs. > > The tree is green. > > The girl is ...
This is is the old problem of “May I introduce you to *mi bonita esposa* or to *mi esposa bonita*?” Or if you prefer French, to *ma jolie femme* vs *ma femme jolie*. Like Latin, Spanish (and to a lesser extent the other Romance tongues) use flexible word order where in English we use speech stress. You can only rarely...
95,216
I've recently found videos about Japanese "Cotton" Sponge Cake. (Possibly also called a 'Jiggly Cake'?) I've never had it, but I figured it looked good, so why not try it? All of the videos I have seen list ingredients, and demonstrate technique, but don't necessarily explain the techniques. I feel I have missed someth...
2018/12/29
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/95216", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/71408/" ]
Try using the actual recipe without substitutions or additions. I've not made this type of cake, so I cannot answer with 100% certainty. However, in general I would recommend not tinkering with ingredients the first time you make a recipe, especially when baking. There are structural reasons for a lot of baking ingred...
Yes, the water bathing technique works. But it is not bathing. I remember in a YouTube video\* a chef sprays water and do a squeeze-and-move pattern for 3 times. It wont't get a uncooked center - the chef did it like after 15 minutes or so. I specifically remember he saying to do so for avoid an uncooked, hard and not-...
121,583
When a product says "refrigerate" or "freeze", the temperature they're asking you to keep it at is not a mystery -- most refrigerators and freezers maintain an expected temperature range. But other products indicate "room temperature" or that they should be stored in a "cool, dry place". Are there actual temperature r...
2022/09/07
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/121583", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/11143/" ]
"Room temperature" as used for testing, analysis, and validation purposes generally falls within the range of 65F-75F (18C-24C). Published research will typically specify temperature ranges used. Both the FDA Food Code (2017) and Canadian Food Retail and Food Services Code (2016), providing guidelines for inspection a...
It depends on whether you are talking about food safety, or food quality. When you are talking about food safety, then "room temperature" is the complete range between 4°C (40°F) and 60°C (140°F). There are upper limits for the time that refrigeration-needing items can spend in this range (anywhere in it). "Cool, dry ...
121,583
When a product says "refrigerate" or "freeze", the temperature they're asking you to keep it at is not a mystery -- most refrigerators and freezers maintain an expected temperature range. But other products indicate "room temperature" or that they should be stored in a "cool, dry place". Are there actual temperature r...
2022/09/07
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/121583", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/11143/" ]
"Room temperature" as used for testing, analysis, and validation purposes generally falls within the range of 65F-75F (18C-24C). Published research will typically specify temperature ranges used. Both the FDA Food Code (2017) and Canadian Food Retail and Food Services Code (2016), providing guidelines for inspection a...
If you are reading this in a recipe, as opposed to product packaging, then "room temperature" and "cool" are going to vary according to the writer. That is, those terms mean different things for a Finnish recipe author than they do for a Brazilian one. As a specific example where this could affect cooking is making [d...
121,583
When a product says "refrigerate" or "freeze", the temperature they're asking you to keep it at is not a mystery -- most refrigerators and freezers maintain an expected temperature range. But other products indicate "room temperature" or that they should be stored in a "cool, dry place". Are there actual temperature r...
2022/09/07
[ "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/121583", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com", "https://cooking.stackexchange.com/users/11143/" ]
It depends on whether you are talking about food safety, or food quality. When you are talking about food safety, then "room temperature" is the complete range between 4°C (40°F) and 60°C (140°F). There are upper limits for the time that refrigeration-needing items can spend in this range (anywhere in it). "Cool, dry ...
If you are reading this in a recipe, as opposed to product packaging, then "room temperature" and "cool" are going to vary according to the writer. That is, those terms mean different things for a Finnish recipe author than they do for a Brazilian one. As a specific example where this could affect cooking is making [d...
3,218,557
I would like to know which is best suited for displaying visitor stats in our websites The key areas under our consideration are 1. User Count 2. Unique User Count 3. User Location Regards, naveenj
2010/07/10
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/3218557", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/17447/" ]
[Google Analytics](http://www.google.com/analytics/) is free and it fits all your requirements.
Google Analytics - Now they also have numerous API so you can get all the data you want through PHP/your server.
3,218,557
I would like to know which is best suited for displaying visitor stats in our websites The key areas under our consideration are 1. User Count 2. Unique User Count 3. User Location Regards, naveenj
2010/07/10
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/3218557", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/17447/" ]
[Piwik](http://piwik.org/) is a self-hosted, Open Source competitor to Google Analytics written in PHP. It can do 1) and 2) no problem. The one thing it doesn't seem to be doing, at least not out of the box, is user location on city or at least regional level. It can get the country and the online provider, but nothi...
Google Analytics - Now they also have numerous API so you can get all the data you want through PHP/your server.
37,350
Does the presence of microvilli on a cell's surface ensure that it's more resistant to cell swelling or lysis in a hypotonic solution, as compared to a normal cell?
2015/08/30
[ "https://biology.stackexchange.com/questions/37350", "https://biology.stackexchange.com", "https://biology.stackexchange.com/users/16650/" ]
**Microvilli**, are cellular protrusions on the membrane and hence they increase the total surface area of the cell in context. If we evaluate the characteristics of microvilli and the structural appearance, we know that; they have many small folds; strengthened and lined by the protein filament *actin*; bedded in a t...
Most animal cells have reservoirs of membrane, including microvilli (Sheetz et al, Annu. Rev. Biophys. Biomol. Struct. 2006. 35:417–34). This can help preventing lysis in hypotonic conditions, but has other functions as it allows the cell to take varied shapes without being constrained by its membrane area. This is no...
116,982
I am running Python 3.5 and I want to install PyGame, the website only supports up to version 3.2. I have tried a few forums on this and other websites but they are all for Python 3.4. Does anyone know were I can find the install file for Python 3.5 and how to install it?
2016/02/20
[ "https://gamedev.stackexchange.com/questions/116982", "https://gamedev.stackexchange.com", "https://gamedev.stackexchange.com/users/79439/" ]
You mean collision, not trigger. Trigger volumes are non-solid. In Unity, in the Component menu under physics, add a Mesh Collider. By default, it will select the same mesh as the model, but you will probably want to make a low-poly mesh to use for collision instead of the full detail one you use for visuals.
Add 3D cubes in the scene near the floor of the stadium, it will have a default 3D box collider in it. Scale it as your need. Then it will work as collider which will keep your character just in the stadium plane. Trigger is an another variable that makes the collider component penetrable. I guess that's not what you ...
32,096
In the second season of Sword Art Online, Yuuki had an 11-hit Original Sword Skill. She passed it down to Asuna before she died. She named the skill, "Mother's Rosario". Can anyone tell me what exactly is Rosario supposed to mean? I would like to know what it literally means and what it means in the current context an...
2016/05/14
[ "https://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/32096", "https://anime.stackexchange.com", "https://anime.stackexchange.com/users/13228/" ]
Yuuki's mother turned to Catholicism after learning about her and her family's affliction. This much I'm pretty sure was mentioned in the anime, and it left a strong impression on Yuuki herself. The author said the skill name is a memento to her mother. (I'll need to find the exact quote later, but it was an answer to...
I think the title "Mother's Rosario" comes from Yuuki's religion (or her mother' religion), the number of shots in her unique sword skill along with the gift she makes to Asuna. "Rosario" is the Italian/Latin (no Portuguese) word used for a form of prayer in the Roman Catholic Church. In its short form, it consists i...
32,096
In the second season of Sword Art Online, Yuuki had an 11-hit Original Sword Skill. She passed it down to Asuna before she died. She named the skill, "Mother's Rosario". Can anyone tell me what exactly is Rosario supposed to mean? I would like to know what it literally means and what it means in the current context an...
2016/05/14
[ "https://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/32096", "https://anime.stackexchange.com", "https://anime.stackexchange.com/users/13228/" ]
Yuuki's mother turned to Catholicism after learning about her and her family's affliction. This much I'm pretty sure was mentioned in the anime, and it left a strong impression on Yuuki herself. The author said the skill name is a memento to her mother. (I'll need to find the exact quote later, but it was an answer to...
If you want the TL;DR version, just skip to the last paragraph. This question is a bit easier to understand if you're Catholic or are knowledgeable in Catholicism. I'll try my best to help explain this as a Catholic myself. It might be long, but trust me, you will understand Yuuki/Zekken from Sword Art Online 2 a lot ...
32,096
In the second season of Sword Art Online, Yuuki had an 11-hit Original Sword Skill. She passed it down to Asuna before she died. She named the skill, "Mother's Rosario". Can anyone tell me what exactly is Rosario supposed to mean? I would like to know what it literally means and what it means in the current context an...
2016/05/14
[ "https://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/32096", "https://anime.stackexchange.com", "https://anime.stackexchange.com/users/13228/" ]
Yuuki's mother turned to Catholicism after learning about her and her family's affliction. This much I'm pretty sure was mentioned in the anime, and it left a strong impression on Yuuki herself. The author said the skill name is a memento to her mother. (I'll need to find the exact quote later, but it was an answer to...
Now it has been established on this forum that Rosario is Rosary. Yuuki gave Mother's Rosario to Asuna to protect her in the episode. Now in real life, devoted Catholics say the Rosary as a prayer. In fact the Blessed Mother Mary promises protection against hell to the souls who recite the Rosary. So it can be interpr...
32,096
In the second season of Sword Art Online, Yuuki had an 11-hit Original Sword Skill. She passed it down to Asuna before she died. She named the skill, "Mother's Rosario". Can anyone tell me what exactly is Rosario supposed to mean? I would like to know what it literally means and what it means in the current context an...
2016/05/14
[ "https://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/32096", "https://anime.stackexchange.com", "https://anime.stackexchange.com/users/13228/" ]
I think the title "Mother's Rosario" comes from Yuuki's religion (or her mother' religion), the number of shots in her unique sword skill along with the gift she makes to Asuna. "Rosario" is the Italian/Latin (no Portuguese) word used for a form of prayer in the Roman Catholic Church. In its short form, it consists i...
If you want the TL;DR version, just skip to the last paragraph. This question is a bit easier to understand if you're Catholic or are knowledgeable in Catholicism. I'll try my best to help explain this as a Catholic myself. It might be long, but trust me, you will understand Yuuki/Zekken from Sword Art Online 2 a lot ...
32,096
In the second season of Sword Art Online, Yuuki had an 11-hit Original Sword Skill. She passed it down to Asuna before she died. She named the skill, "Mother's Rosario". Can anyone tell me what exactly is Rosario supposed to mean? I would like to know what it literally means and what it means in the current context an...
2016/05/14
[ "https://anime.stackexchange.com/questions/32096", "https://anime.stackexchange.com", "https://anime.stackexchange.com/users/13228/" ]
I think the title "Mother's Rosario" comes from Yuuki's religion (or her mother' religion), the number of shots in her unique sword skill along with the gift she makes to Asuna. "Rosario" is the Italian/Latin (no Portuguese) word used for a form of prayer in the Roman Catholic Church. In its short form, it consists i...
Now it has been established on this forum that Rosario is Rosary. Yuuki gave Mother's Rosario to Asuna to protect her in the episode. Now in real life, devoted Catholics say the Rosary as a prayer. In fact the Blessed Mother Mary promises protection against hell to the souls who recite the Rosary. So it can be interpr...
315,866
In Hindu mythology, there are several mentions of a weapon, for which there is no defense. When that weapon is aimed at the enemy, the end of enemy is certain. That weapon is referred to as [Bhahmastra](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmastra). Can you suggest me a corresponding phrase that would mean the same thing,...
2022/05/25
[ "https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/315866", "https://ell.stackexchange.com", "https://ell.stackexchange.com/users/893/" ]
One might use "ace in a hole" but it is not used commonly in conversations. Some other phrases are * card up one's sleeve * ace up your sleeve * key advantage * trump
You could describe it as an [Armageddon](https://www.dictionary.com/browse/armageddon) weapon. It is used in this way in a video called "[Putin's Armageddon weapon](https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=508658340896192)".
315,866
In Hindu mythology, there are several mentions of a weapon, for which there is no defense. When that weapon is aimed at the enemy, the end of enemy is certain. That weapon is referred to as [Bhahmastra](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahmastra). Can you suggest me a corresponding phrase that would mean the same thing,...
2022/05/25
[ "https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/315866", "https://ell.stackexchange.com", "https://ell.stackexchange.com/users/893/" ]
Doomsday weapon or Doomsday device come to mind. There are also "weapons of mass destruction", but that is mainly referring to contemporary weapons, such as nuclear bombs. Apocalyptic can be used to describe something that can bring about "the apocalypse", where the world changes to an unrecognizable state - usually ...
You could describe it as an [Armageddon](https://www.dictionary.com/browse/armageddon) weapon. It is used in this way in a video called "[Putin's Armageddon weapon](https://www.facebook.com/watch/?v=508658340896192)".
482,110
Below is the picture of what I mean. So, I wanna know the name of these "rolls", what are they called? Pellets? Rolls? As you can see, some people use razors or fabric shavers to get rid of them. [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)
2019/01/21
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/482110", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/327333/" ]
Those are commonly known as [***pills***](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pill_(textile)), or *bobbles* in the UK, though other terms may be in use depending on location. From Wikipedia: > > A **pill**, colloquially known as a **bobble**, **fuzzball**, or **lint ball** is a small ball of fibers that forms on a piece of...
I'm pretty sure that's lint. > > Lint is the common name for visible accumulations of textile fibers > and other materials, usually found on and around clothing. > > [Lint (Wikipedia article)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lint_(material)) > > > Here are the before and after photos of a carpet after a lint re...
482,110
Below is the picture of what I mean. So, I wanna know the name of these "rolls", what are they called? Pellets? Rolls? As you can see, some people use razors or fabric shavers to get rid of them. [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)
2019/01/21
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/482110", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/327333/" ]
I'm pretty sure that's lint. > > Lint is the common name for visible accumulations of textile fibers > and other materials, usually found on and around clothing. > > [Lint (Wikipedia article)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lint_(material)) > > > Here are the before and after photos of a carpet after a lint re...
In the UK I call them bobbles, "the clothes have gone bobbly." and to double check I am not alone: > > <https://www.ebay.co.uk/bhp/bobble-remover> > > > [cambridge dictionary](https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/bobble) > > **bobble** noun > > > ​ uk (us pill) a small ball of thread that deve...
482,110
Below is the picture of what I mean. So, I wanna know the name of these "rolls", what are they called? Pellets? Rolls? As you can see, some people use razors or fabric shavers to get rid of them. [![enter image description here](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)](https://i.stack.imgur.com/F6BnM.png)
2019/01/21
[ "https://english.stackexchange.com/questions/482110", "https://english.stackexchange.com", "https://english.stackexchange.com/users/327333/" ]
Those are commonly known as [***pills***](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pill_(textile)), or *bobbles* in the UK, though other terms may be in use depending on location. From Wikipedia: > > A **pill**, colloquially known as a **bobble**, **fuzzball**, or **lint ball** is a small ball of fibers that forms on a piece of...
In the UK I call them bobbles, "the clothes have gone bobbly." and to double check I am not alone: > > <https://www.ebay.co.uk/bhp/bobble-remover> > > > [cambridge dictionary](https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/bobble) > > **bobble** noun > > > ​ uk (us pill) a small ball of thread that deve...
3,808,346
I'm insterested to know the techniques that where used to discover vulnerabilities. I know the theory about buffer overflows, format string exploits, ecc, I also wrote some of them. But I still don't realize how to find a vulnerability in an efficient way. I don't looking for a magic wand, I'm only looking for the mo...
2010/09/27
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/3808346", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/459984/" ]
On the lower layers, manually examining memory can be very revealing. You can certainly view memory with a tool like Visual Studio, and I would imagine that someone has even written a tool to crudely reconstruct an application based on the instructions it executes and the data structures it places into memory. On the...
Aside from buffer overflow and format string exploits, you may want to read a bit on **code injection**. (a lot of what you'll come across will be web/DB related, but dig deeper) AFAIK this was a huge force in jailbreaking the iThingies. Saurik's mobile substrate allow(s) (-ed?) you to load 3rd party .dylibs, and call ...
3,808,346
I'm insterested to know the techniques that where used to discover vulnerabilities. I know the theory about buffer overflows, format string exploits, ecc, I also wrote some of them. But I still don't realize how to find a vulnerability in an efficient way. I don't looking for a magic wand, I'm only looking for the mo...
2010/09/27
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/3808346", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/459984/" ]
There is no efficient way to do this, as firms spend a good deal of money to produce and maintain secure software. Ideally, their work in securing software does not start with a looking for vulnerabilities in the finished product; so many vulns have already been eradicated when the software is out. Back to your questi...
Aside from buffer overflow and format string exploits, you may want to read a bit on **code injection**. (a lot of what you'll come across will be web/DB related, but dig deeper) AFAIK this was a huge force in jailbreaking the iThingies. Saurik's mobile substrate allow(s) (-ed?) you to load 3rd party .dylibs, and call ...
42,810,344
We got a programm which encrypts data and need to know wether it's using SHA-1 or SHA-2. Unfortunately the only hint is a table with hash values. Can someone please tell me how I can distinguish the two encryption types and tell which one is used here?
2017/03/15
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/42810344", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/5263634/" ]
> > We got a programm which encrypts data and need to know wether it's using SHA-1 or SHA-2. > > > I assume you mean that you're hashing data. SHA is a family of hashing algorithms, not encryption algorithms. The primary way you would distinguish is their lengths. SHA-1 is 160 bits (20 bytes). SHA-2 comes in seve...
You probably mean hashing not encryption. encryption is reversible, hashing is not, encryption is like random permutation as opposed to hash which tries to be like a random function. SHA-1 is 160bit (20 bytes) long, while SHA-2 is a family of hash functions 224-512 bits long (28-32 bytes). Note you may have hex-encod...
173,652
So, when you use a dragon for military purposes, it's probably for the best to keep them close and keep them happy. Which means building them a place they can call home. Now, housing a dragon is quite difficult, you have to proof the place against hissy fits when the dragon start flipping tables, you have to make sure...
2020/04/05
[ "https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/questions/173652", "https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com", "https://worldbuilding.stackexchange.com/users/32097/" ]
Like a cross between a castle and a church. Castles are better protected against fire, at least one side is (the outer walls). They are also build to withstand a lot of blunt force such as a battering ram or a rowdy dragon after a bit too much to drink. Churches are less fireproof (see the Notre Dame or other churche...
The dragon can manipulate objects but is too clumsy for hobbies requiring refined motor skills. That means there's barely any activities left, recreational or otherwise that have to be done indoors. So the house just got a lot smaller. I don't think stone would necessarily be the main construction element. It depends ...
38,536,998
This is a hand coded pedal to the metal question and not ANTLR vs BISON. Also, this is for parsing a binary format. There is no lexical analysis.
2016/07/23
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/38536998", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/4603507/" ]
The cost of parsing a strict pre- (or post-) order expression is trivial, using either top-down or bottom-up techniques. It will be dwarfed by any of the other tasks, even lexical analysis. The tiny speed differences will be the result of implementation details rather than algorithmic strategy. There's no point in usi...
Ignoring LL(1) and LR(1) for the moment now, you'd typically parse these sorts of expressions by rolling your own parsing code. You'd maintain a stack of previously parsed and evaluated subexpressions, then repeatedly either pop the top two items off the stack and merge them (if you read another operator) or push somet...
38,536,998
This is a hand coded pedal to the metal question and not ANTLR vs BISON. Also, this is for parsing a binary format. There is no lexical analysis.
2016/07/23
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/38536998", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/4603507/" ]
The cost of parsing a strict pre- (or post-) order expression is trivial, using either top-down or bottom-up techniques. It will be dwarfed by any of the other tasks, even lexical analysis. The tiny speed differences will be the result of implementation details rather than algorithmic strategy. There's no point in usi...
This article, [LL and LR Parsing Demystified](http://blog.reverberate.org/2013/07/ll-and-lr-parsing-demystified.html), backs up my intuition: > > Polish and Reverse Polish notation directly correspond, in my view, to LL and LR parsing, respectively. > > >
119,980
A confession: I have never really understood the basic model of fiat money and central banking, by which a central bank controls the money supply. By the standards of someone trained in mathematics, all of the explanations that I have ever seen are either too short or too long. My impression is that the way that a cent...
2013/01/27
[ "https://mathoverflow.net/questions/119980", "https://mathoverflow.net", "https://mathoverflow.net/users/1450/" ]
Thanks to the comments and answers from Scott Carnahan and Michael Greinecker, I think that I understand it better now. I'm going to write this as a CW summary answer and also accept one of the other answers. People often talk as if all currency is borrowed from the central bank, but that is not really true. If it wer...
Although not a mathematical concise definition but empirical evidence that money is created "out of thin air".. "It was examined whether in the process of making money available to the borrower the bank transfers these funds from other accounts (within or outside the bank). In the process of making loaned money availa...
119,980
A confession: I have never really understood the basic model of fiat money and central banking, by which a central bank controls the money supply. By the standards of someone trained in mathematics, all of the explanations that I have ever seen are either too short or too long. My impression is that the way that a cent...
2013/01/27
[ "https://mathoverflow.net/questions/119980", "https://mathoverflow.net", "https://mathoverflow.net/users/1450/" ]
I think an answer that discusses the actual institutional details of how the Fed controls the money supply would be off-topic here. Also, the Fed works slighlty differently from the ECB in that regard and there is more than one method of influencing the money supply (take a look at the wikipedia page on [money creation...
Thanks to the comments and answers from Scott Carnahan and Michael Greinecker, I think that I understand it better now. I'm going to write this as a CW summary answer and also accept one of the other answers. People often talk as if all currency is borrowed from the central bank, but that is not really true. If it wer...
119,980
A confession: I have never really understood the basic model of fiat money and central banking, by which a central bank controls the money supply. By the standards of someone trained in mathematics, all of the explanations that I have ever seen are either too short or too long. My impression is that the way that a cent...
2013/01/27
[ "https://mathoverflow.net/questions/119980", "https://mathoverflow.net", "https://mathoverflow.net/users/1450/" ]
I think an answer that discusses the actual institutional details of how the Fed controls the money supply would be off-topic here. Also, the Fed works slighlty differently from the ECB in that regard and there is more than one method of influencing the money supply (take a look at the wikipedia page on [money creation...
For a mathematical model see [Hayashi and Matsui, 1994.](https://dl.dropbox.com/u/5188175/fiatmoney.pdf) For an in-depth discussion without too many (actually, any) equations, see many books by Murray Rothbard (all available on Amazon.com).
119,980
A confession: I have never really understood the basic model of fiat money and central banking, by which a central bank controls the money supply. By the standards of someone trained in mathematics, all of the explanations that I have ever seen are either too short or too long. My impression is that the way that a cent...
2013/01/27
[ "https://mathoverflow.net/questions/119980", "https://mathoverflow.net", "https://mathoverflow.net/users/1450/" ]
For a mathematical model see [Hayashi and Matsui, 1994.](https://dl.dropbox.com/u/5188175/fiatmoney.pdf) For an in-depth discussion without too many (actually, any) equations, see many books by Murray Rothbard (all available on Amazon.com).
Although not a mathematical concise definition but empirical evidence that money is created "out of thin air".. "It was examined whether in the process of making money available to the borrower the bank transfers these funds from other accounts (within or outside the bank). In the process of making loaned money availa...
87,506
My outdoor frost proof spigot worked fine before winter. I detached the water hose before winter. After the winter, the spigot does not work, nor does it leak, inside or outside. Do I need to replace it, or is there a repair I can do. Thanks
2016/03/26
[ "https://diy.stackexchange.com/questions/87506", "https://diy.stackexchange.com", "https://diy.stackexchange.com/users/51954/" ]
The washer that seals the water flow may have become unscrewed from the end of the shaft. I had this problem. I had to remove the shaft and tighten the washer back on the end
It may just be the handle or if it's not turning then the seal may be stuck. These do want to be tilted down a little when installed, so they can drain out. But, if it's not actually blown apart by ice, then these are usually re-buildable. See example below. If the outer sleeve is split, you'll have to get a new spigot...
30,012
In John 14:14 Jesus told the Apostles **"And I will do whatever you ask in My name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son."** Does this promise apply to anyone and everyone from that time forward or was it just for his Apostles?
2017/10/15
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/30012", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/21700/" ]
John uses the 2nd person plural form of the verb αἰτέω (*aiteō*). The King James and other archaic versions correctly preserve the original Greek by using the pronoun "ye": > > *Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.* > > > The l...
The passage begins back at John 13:1 and there are seven questions asked and answered : * 13:6 (Peter) Lord, doth thou wash my feet ? * 13:25 (John) Lord, is it I ? * 13:36 (Peter) Lord, whither goest thou ? * 13:37 (Peter) Lord, why cannot I follow thee now ? * 14:5 (Thomas) Lord, we know not whither thou goest; and ...
30,012
In John 14:14 Jesus told the Apostles **"And I will do whatever you ask in My name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son."** Does this promise apply to anyone and everyone from that time forward or was it just for his Apostles?
2017/10/15
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/30012", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/21700/" ]
John uses the 2nd person plural form of the verb αἰτέω (*aiteō*). The King James and other archaic versions correctly preserve the original Greek by using the pronoun "ye": > > *Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.* > > > The l...
Jesus was talking to the apostles, but throughout this conversation over the Passover meal, he clarifies that he is speaking to those who believe in him, who know him, love him and keep his commands. So this promise can be seen to extend to anyone else who also does this. The potential is there for anyone, but not ever...
30,012
In John 14:14 Jesus told the Apostles **"And I will do whatever you ask in My name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son."** Does this promise apply to anyone and everyone from that time forward or was it just for his Apostles?
2017/10/15
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/30012", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/21700/" ]
John uses the 2nd person plural form of the verb αἰτέω (*aiteō*). The King James and other archaic versions correctly preserve the original Greek by using the pronoun "ye": > > *Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.* > > > The l...
Ask and receive belong to those that can communicate with words that are verbally spoken, or words that are typed, or written, or sign, and body language. Money hinders this. People think that money helps, not helping anyone. More money in circulation will mean more debt. People end up giving what is worthless, money-w...
30,012
In John 14:14 Jesus told the Apostles **"And I will do whatever you ask in My name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son."** Does this promise apply to anyone and everyone from that time forward or was it just for his Apostles?
2017/10/15
[ "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/questions/30012", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com", "https://hermeneutics.stackexchange.com/users/21700/" ]
John uses the 2nd person plural form of the verb αἰτέω (*aiteō*). The King James and other archaic versions correctly preserve the original Greek by using the pronoun "ye": > > *Therefore I say unto you, What things soever ye desire, when ye pray, believe that ye receive them, and ye shall have them.* > > > The l...
In John 14:14 Jesus told the Apostles "And I will do whatever **you** ask in My name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son." This conversation took place in the private party of the last suppers with the 12 disciples. So, the referent "you" referred to the selected disciples. Does this promise apply to anyo...
206
Once again, we have a community evaluation. This is the same as last time, it's in the review queues. Head [here](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/review/community-eval/) to participate. Since the new queues don't really provide the option to add eval-specific comments (unlike [the old method](https://chemistry.me...
2013/02/13
[ "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/206", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/users/22/" ]
I think most of that content is good, and lives up to the standards I've witnessed on other stack exchanges. I could wish for more activity, but that will hopefully pick up in time. Maybe we should encourage self-answering questions some more, just to build content that will attract more new users?
We seem to have a good crop this time (I didn't have to click "needs improvement" even once!). The quality/informativeness of the answers is quite high. I don't like all the questions, but the answers make up for a lot of it :) Once the eval is over (and after confirming this with the other mods), I shall post some gr...
206
Once again, we have a community evaluation. This is the same as last time, it's in the review queues. Head [here](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/review/community-eval/) to participate. Since the new queues don't really provide the option to add eval-specific comments (unlike [the old method](https://chemistry.me...
2013/02/13
[ "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/206", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/users/22/" ]
I think most of that content is good, and lives up to the standards I've witnessed on other stack exchanges. I could wish for more activity, but that will hopefully pick up in time. Maybe we should encourage self-answering questions some more, just to build content that will attract more new users?
Final Results ============= * [What is the process for purifying KOH?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/2836/what-is-the-process-for-purifying-koh) **Net Score: 1** (Excellent: 2, Satisfactory: 6, Needs Improvement: 1) * [How does the litmus pH indicator work?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questio...
206
Once again, we have a community evaluation. This is the same as last time, it's in the review queues. Head [here](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/review/community-eval/) to participate. Since the new queues don't really provide the option to add eval-specific comments (unlike [the old method](https://chemistry.me...
2013/02/13
[ "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/206", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/users/22/" ]
I think most of that content is good, and lives up to the standards I've witnessed on other stack exchanges. I could wish for more activity, but that will hopefully pick up in time. Maybe we should encourage self-answering questions some more, just to build content that will attract more new users?
I'll keep some graphs regarding the evals here. Their design is inspired (and largely copied) from the ones on [genealogy](https://genealogy.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/1621/community-eval-finished) and [gaming](https://gaming.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/6858/community-evaluation-results-2-february-2013). Wh...
206
Once again, we have a community evaluation. This is the same as last time, it's in the review queues. Head [here](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/review/community-eval/) to participate. Since the new queues don't really provide the option to add eval-specific comments (unlike [the old method](https://chemistry.me...
2013/02/13
[ "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/206", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/users/22/" ]
We seem to have a good crop this time (I didn't have to click "needs improvement" even once!). The quality/informativeness of the answers is quite high. I don't like all the questions, but the answers make up for a lot of it :) Once the eval is over (and after confirming this with the other mods), I shall post some gr...
Final Results ============= * [What is the process for purifying KOH?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/2836/what-is-the-process-for-purifying-koh) **Net Score: 1** (Excellent: 2, Satisfactory: 6, Needs Improvement: 1) * [How does the litmus pH indicator work?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questio...
206
Once again, we have a community evaluation. This is the same as last time, it's in the review queues. Head [here](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/review/community-eval/) to participate. Since the new queues don't really provide the option to add eval-specific comments (unlike [the old method](https://chemistry.me...
2013/02/13
[ "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/206", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com", "https://chemistry.meta.stackexchange.com/users/22/" ]
I'll keep some graphs regarding the evals here. Their design is inspired (and largely copied) from the ones on [genealogy](https://genealogy.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/1621/community-eval-finished) and [gaming](https://gaming.meta.stackexchange.com/questions/6858/community-evaluation-results-2-february-2013). Wh...
Final Results ============= * [What is the process for purifying KOH?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questions/2836/what-is-the-process-for-purifying-koh) **Net Score: 1** (Excellent: 2, Satisfactory: 6, Needs Improvement: 1) * [How does the litmus pH indicator work?](https://chemistry.stackexchange.com/questio...
72,291
Installing jre7-openjdk prints this message: > > when you use a non-reparenting window manager set > \_JAVA\_AWT\_WM\_NONREPARENTING=1 in /etc/profile.d/jre.sh > > > My WM is openbox, have I to edit the file?
2013/04/13
[ "https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/72291", "https://unix.stackexchange.com", "https://unix.stackexchange.com/users/34639/" ]
The [re-parenting window manager](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re-parenting_window_manager) article on Wikipedia strongly implies that openbox is a reparenting wm: > > Virtually all modern window managers are re-parenting, although > earlier window managers, such as the uwm window manager, were not. > Exceptions to...
This is already answered (and goldilocks is right), but the answer isn't direct. To remedy this: No. Openbox is a reparenting WM. Just about any WM with "fancy" window borders is re-parenting. I know of no window manager with borders that is non-reparenting.
12,075
Can Us embassies in foreign countries arrest Americans? For example if an individual is living in France but there is a bench warrant for their arrest for not appearing in court in New York. If they go into the US embassy in France to get their passport renewed can they be arrested?
2016/08/15
[ "https://politics.stackexchange.com/questions/12075", "https://politics.stackexchange.com", "https://politics.stackexchange.com/users/9244/" ]
Yes, but its not that simple. US Embassies are protected by US Marine Military police. These MP's have the authority to detain and arrest anyone on Embassy(or consulate) grounds given proper cause. What is required to happen once depends on the treaties regarding the establishment of the embassy and/or consulates invo...
Since an embassy is the country in question, the person could be arrested because the warrant would be valid on embassy grounds. One step off the grounds and the law of the host country would apply.
8,502,936
I also need to find a library which allows to implement the "chroma key" effect in Java. The video contains some part in green color, which is replaced which a picture during the rendering in order to create a new video. I am linking my question with a similar question which was already answered but with uncomplete an...
2011/12/14
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/8502936", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/1097419/" ]
Going to answer my own question, according to the [response on the bug](https://developers.facebook.com/bugs/206899726060879) seems like the official answer is: *"We said it would be published but it wasn't, so just wait until we say it will be published again".*
Are you trying to read messages or send them? It's still not possible to send them but reading them should work for any app now
26,725
I am a level 21 Blood Elf Frost Mage and I was wondering: What are glyphs? Where do you learn them in horde area and what should I be doing with them?
2011/07/25
[ "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/26725", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/10955/" ]
Glyphs are enhancements you can add to your character. They are created by scribes using the inscription profession. You can buy them on the AH, or from a scribe. See <http://www.wowwiki.com/Glyph> for more info.
Glyphs are used to augment your abilities. You have to either make them via inscription or to buy them off the auction house. Here is a full list and reference: <http://www.wowwiki.com/Glyph>
26,725
I am a level 21 Blood Elf Frost Mage and I was wondering: What are glyphs? Where do you learn them in horde area and what should I be doing with them?
2011/07/25
[ "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/26725", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/10955/" ]
[Glyphs](http://www.wowpedia.org/Glyph) are kind of like meta-talents, that can be changed on the fly, without a full respec. They generally modify a specific spell or talent in some way, and come in three categories: * **Prime Glyphs** modify a spell or talent in a way that is directly related to it's effectiveness i...
Glyphs are enhancements you can add to your character. They are created by scribes using the inscription profession. You can buy them on the AH, or from a scribe. See <http://www.wowwiki.com/Glyph> for more info.
26,725
I am a level 21 Blood Elf Frost Mage and I was wondering: What are glyphs? Where do you learn them in horde area and what should I be doing with them?
2011/07/25
[ "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/26725", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/10955/" ]
[Glyphs](http://www.wowpedia.org/Glyph) are kind of like meta-talents, that can be changed on the fly, without a full respec. They generally modify a specific spell or talent in some way, and come in three categories: * **Prime Glyphs** modify a spell or talent in a way that is directly related to it's effectiveness i...
Glyphs are used to augment your abilities. You have to either make them via inscription or to buy them off the auction house. Here is a full list and reference: <http://www.wowwiki.com/Glyph>
26,725
I am a level 21 Blood Elf Frost Mage and I was wondering: What are glyphs? Where do you learn them in horde area and what should I be doing with them?
2011/07/25
[ "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/26725", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/10955/" ]
Glyphs are used to modify your spells and abilities. Here are some more specifics: * Glyphs are split into 3 categories: Minor, Major, and Prime. * Glyphs are class specific. * Glyphs have level restrictions. * Glyphs are created through the Inscription profession. * Once you learn a glyph, you have it in your spellb...
Glyphs are used to augment your abilities. You have to either make them via inscription or to buy them off the auction house. Here is a full list and reference: <http://www.wowwiki.com/Glyph>
26,725
I am a level 21 Blood Elf Frost Mage and I was wondering: What are glyphs? Where do you learn them in horde area and what should I be doing with them?
2011/07/25
[ "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/26725", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com", "https://gaming.stackexchange.com/users/10955/" ]
[Glyphs](http://www.wowpedia.org/Glyph) are kind of like meta-talents, that can be changed on the fly, without a full respec. They generally modify a specific spell or talent in some way, and come in three categories: * **Prime Glyphs** modify a spell or talent in a way that is directly related to it's effectiveness i...
Glyphs are used to modify your spells and abilities. Here are some more specifics: * Glyphs are split into 3 categories: Minor, Major, and Prime. * Glyphs are class specific. * Glyphs have level restrictions. * Glyphs are created through the Inscription profession. * Once you learn a glyph, you have it in your spellb...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
> > Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. > > > Showing a position is true or probably true is impossible. The idea that it is possible and desirable...
When you TRUST someone else, your mind are wide open to believe on what other people are telling as assertions. With a Philosophy that says that "you always need to Think by Yourself", it's acceptable that every assertion coming from another person need to be verified in your own values system. Maybe you are asking t...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
You simply *can't do it* uninitiated with any particular degree of reliability. You can notice all the amazing techno-wizardry that is commonplace in our lives, realize that this all came from science, and decide that scientists get a lot of things right and therefore you should believe them when they more or less agre...
> > Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. > > > Showing a position is true or probably true is impossible. The idea that it is possible and desirable...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
I'd broadly agree with the answer above. In the case of believing scientists or experts in scientific fields I would add that your 'wisdom of crowds' probablistic approach is still valid there but the work is largely done for you by the peer review process. Assuming that you trust the expert you are talking to to tell ...
When you TRUST someone else, your mind are wide open to believe on what other people are telling as assertions. With a Philosophy that says that "you always need to Think by Yourself", it's acceptable that every assertion coming from another person need to be verified in your own values system. Maybe you are asking t...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
You simply *can't do it* uninitiated with any particular degree of reliability. You can notice all the amazing techno-wizardry that is commonplace in our lives, realize that this all came from science, and decide that scientists get a lot of things right and therefore you should believe them when they more or less agre...
I'd broadly agree with the answer above. In the case of believing scientists or experts in scientific fields I would add that your 'wisdom of crowds' probablistic approach is still valid there but the work is largely done for you by the peer review process. Assuming that you trust the expert you are talking to to tell ...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
You simply *can't do it* uninitiated with any particular degree of reliability. You can notice all the amazing techno-wizardry that is commonplace in our lives, realize that this all came from science, and decide that scientists get a lot of things right and therefore you should believe them when they more or less agre...
When you TRUST someone else, your mind are wide open to believe on what other people are telling as assertions. With a Philosophy that says that "you always need to Think by Yourself", it's acceptable that every assertion coming from another person need to be verified in your own values system. Maybe you are asking t...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
You don't have to believe anyone. And as long as you don't have to make any important decisions based on your beliefs or non-beliefs, you are fine. The problem is that you have to make many decisions in your life. And sometimes there will be decisions where 99.9% of the population are not capable of evaluating proper...
When you TRUST someone else, your mind are wide open to believe on what other people are telling as assertions. With a Philosophy that says that "you always need to Think by Yourself", it's acceptable that every assertion coming from another person need to be verified in your own values system. Maybe you are asking t...
15,132
Looking for sourced answers or article references for this question, please. Why should someone believe another person's assertions? I would imagine that the answer is because most of the times when I have been able to verify other people's statements, I've found them to be true. This becomes more likely as more peop...
2014/08/11
[ "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/questions/15132", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com", "https://philosophy.stackexchange.com/users/6699/" ]
You simply *can't do it* uninitiated with any particular degree of reliability. You can notice all the amazing techno-wizardry that is commonplace in our lives, realize that this all came from science, and decide that scientists get a lot of things right and therefore you should believe them when they more or less agre...
You don't have to believe anyone. And as long as you don't have to make any important decisions based on your beliefs or non-beliefs, you are fine. The problem is that you have to make many decisions in your life. And sometimes there will be decisions where 99.9% of the population are not capable of evaluating proper...
1,311,847
Is it possible to run an assembly created by a Visual Studio test project outside Visual Studio itself? I would like to create a test application **that should be run also on machines where VS is not installed**, and get a (graphical) report of the test outcomes. **EDIT** looking at the post provided in the accept...
2009/08/21
[ "https://Stackoverflow.com/questions/1311847", "https://Stackoverflow.com", "https://Stackoverflow.com/users/15622/" ]
Check out [MsTest](http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms182489(VS.80).aspx) command line. You can either use it or roll your own code as a test harness around the assemblies. But if you want the GUI and to legally use MSTEST you will need a license for Visual Studio on the machine you will run the tests on. You c...
I don't know is this possible like you describe it. If you are using Team Foundation Server you can create Report to display status of your latest Continuous integration (or Nightly) build where you can display test results in any way you want. One example is here: [![TFS report](https://i.stack.imgur.com/YpwwG.gif...
9,428
One way is in response to what I call "demand," or "traffic." That is, people ask more questions about the weather than about education, so "weather" gets a higher priority in data gathering. Another way is what I call "mandate" (by department). That is, the health department is tasked with gathering data about variou...
2016/08/11
[ "https://opendata.stackexchange.com/questions/9428", "https://opendata.stackexchange.com", "https://opendata.stackexchange.com/users/10407/" ]
I do not think there is a definitive answer for this; not that it doesn't exist, rather because no one in government has that much oversight/incite to give you a complete overview/opinion. The mandated model is overwhelmingly the majority of models in place, but the demand/traffic model is growing; "data-driven" to u...
This answer is different across many cities. From my personal experience in working with some municipalities (so I can not speak for every location) much of the city's data is collected at this point. The city, in many cases, has this data but is unsure which topics/ specific datasets should be released. I know in my o...
57,627
How to improve search result speed?
2015/02/18
[ "https://magento.stackexchange.com/questions/57627", "https://magento.stackexchange.com", "https://magento.stackexchange.com/users/9090/" ]
Google may use [different titles](https://webmasters.stackexchange.com/a/44374/17633) and [different descriptions](https://stackoverflow.com/a/28574278/1591669) in their SERPs if they think it’s more useful for their searchers. They don’t necessarily have to come from your content (e.g., sometimes they use content that...
I can only suggest two things. First of all Google is not necessarily using your meta description even if you want it. Second Google might pick the Meta Description from somewhere else, f.e. if you have a DMOZ entry then it could be from there. The only solutions I can think of for you now is using this tool <https://...
11,390
It seems like mainstream access would be easier if there was a more human readable system for bitcoin addresses. No one has to remember IP addresses, we have servers with databases for that. What type of infrastructure is there to send bitcoins to easy-to-remember addresses? Will it ever be a permanent part of the pr...
2013/05/31
[ "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/11390", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/users/3667/" ]
The NXT Cryto has a built in alias system: <http://www.nxtcrypto.org/>
Yes, check out [Onename](https://onename.io) - it's exactly what you're describing. It allows users to register usernames and associate those names with Bitcoin addresses. And the key part is that these usernames are registered in a decentralized namespace according to [Open Name System](http://opennamesystem.org) (a...
11,390
It seems like mainstream access would be easier if there was a more human readable system for bitcoin addresses. No one has to remember IP addresses, we have servers with databases for that. What type of infrastructure is there to send bitcoins to easy-to-remember addresses? Will it ever be a permanent part of the pr...
2013/05/31
[ "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/11390", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/users/3667/" ]
The NXT Cryto has a built in alias system: <http://www.nxtcrypto.org/>
<http://wantsbtc.com> is a dns-like service that forces the user to sign his chosen username to his btc address, thereby proving that they own it.
11,390
It seems like mainstream access would be easier if there was a more human readable system for bitcoin addresses. No one has to remember IP addresses, we have servers with databases for that. What type of infrastructure is there to send bitcoins to easy-to-remember addresses? Will it ever be a permanent part of the pr...
2013/05/31
[ "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/questions/11390", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com", "https://bitcoin.stackexchange.com/users/3667/" ]
The NXT Cryto has a built in alias system: <http://www.nxtcrypto.org/>
The Bitcoin Payment Protocol (BIP70-72) allows fetching a payment request from a URL (and other sources), and has several advantages over using addresses directly in a client. From a user's perspective, it looks like a pay-to-URL, bypassing the need for the user to see the actual addresses involved.