The interns are here! …and someone gave them read write access to the database
via DBA Reactions
The interns are here! …and someone gave them read write access…
Just another WordPress site
The interns are here! …and someone gave them read write access to the database
via DBA Reactions
The interns are here! …and someone gave them read write access…
Me looking at old code I wrote when I just started as a DBA
via DBA Reactions
Me looking at old code I wrote when I just started as a DBA
Device-and-app solutions like Automatic and Mojio mean more cars can get to the cloud.
via Ars Technica
Bringing today’s tech—GPS, efficiency tracking, and more—to 15-year-old clunkers
F1 Racing is like driving jets on the ground. NASCAR is like racing monster cars in sheet metal around an oval. Indy Car are powerful beasts themselves. Each type of racing has their own unique demands and needs. Here is a video that shows the difference between pit stops in F1 Racing, NASCAR, Indy Car, Formula E and WEC.
F1 Racing is the fastest as they have the most crew members (14+) and don’t allow re-fueling mid-race. Indy Car and NASCAR uses 6 crew members and re-fuels. Formula E only has 2 crew members but the driver changes cars completely. And the WEC uses 2 crew members to change the tires, 2 crew members to change drivers and a new driver comes in during the pit sotp.
via Gizmodo
Video compares pit stops in F1 Racing, NASCAR, Indy Car and more
While the FCC has been engaging in a slew of consumer-friendly moves of late (from tougher neutrality rules to fighting for municipal broadband), a few weeks ago the agency turned heads by fully prohibiting towns and cities from imposing price controls on TV service. According to the FCC’s announcement on the matter (pdf), they’re doing this because they believe the cable industry is so competitive, such local TV price restrictions are no longer necessary. The FCC voted 3-2 to approve the measure, with Wheeler uncharacteristically siding with the agency’s two Republican Commissioners to support it.
Wheeler not only bucked consumer advocates and his Commission allies, he ignored the FCC’s own intergovernmental advisory committee, which advised against the change. And while Wheeler’s been notably more consumer friendly than anybody expected, consumer groups like Public Knowledge weren’t big fans of this latest move by the agency boss:
"Congress directed the FCC to streamline the process by which small cable operators can file petitions with the FCC for finding that they are subject to effective competition, which exempts them from some regulatory oversight," said Public Knowledge senior attorney John Bergmayer. "In general, Public Knowledge agrees that the FCC should do what it can to make regulatory processes simpler for smaller entities."
"However, the FCC has gone beyond Congress’s directive, adopting a blanket presumption that all cable operators, large and small, are subject to effective competition. Any analysis that shows that the largest cable companies face effective competition in their local markets is flawed. These companies bundle cable television with high-speed broadband and often have control over valuable programming. They are in a fundamentally different marketplace position than the small cable operators that Congress is concerned with."
So why would a consumer-friendly FCC boss suddenly make a decision that seems, on its surface, decidedly not consumer friendly? Well one, the existence of satellite TV and the rise of telco TV has resulted in the FCC repeatedly declaring that the TV business is effectively competitive each time cable ops apply for exemption, making this 22-year-old process effectively obsolete. Even if, as Public Knowledge notes — broadband bundles and other factors usually mean competition can’t always be adequately measured by the number of TV operators in a market. Of course, the FCC had already been traditionally letting cable operators ignore local price caps (the FCC had granted all but four of 224 such exemption requests since 2013) and they’re relatively rare; Comcast estimates just 17% of its markets see them.
But more importantly, Wheeler knows that internet video is coming. Cable operators and broadcasters have, hand in hand, been raising prices hand over fist on everything from programming to DVR rentals for years, regardless of these limited localized price caps. Wheeler likely hopes that by removing already meager barriers, the cable industry will feel free to raise rates further, and be painfully punished by the rise of internet video. Basically, Wheeler is throwing the cable industry a small bone — with the intent of letting them choke on it.
That might work over the long term, but over the short term the end result will probably only be even higher rates. That could help accelerate cord cutting, and a faster shift toward the more competitive TV market Wheeler is probably envisioning. And while giving the cable industry enough rope to hang itself might work, the problem with his scenario is that broadband ISPs will likely respond to the rise in internet video by increasing their use of broadband caps and overages. And with limited broadband competition, and the FCC generally ignoring the problems inherent with usage caps, that raises a whole slew of issues Wheeler will need to address if he’s truly interested in speeding up a television revolution.
Permalink | Comments | Email This Story
via Techdirt.
FCC Gives Cable Industry Just Enough Rope To Hang Itself
When the PM says, “The ‘plan’ will be changing throughout the production deployment.“
via DBA Reactions
When the PM says, “The ‘plan’ will be changing throughout the…
UrtheCast has published the first full color HD videos recorded of Earth from space via a new camera system mounted on the International Space Station. The videos are short recordings of regions in Barcelona, Boston, and London, and show the cities at a one-meter resolution. Read more
via Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)
UrtheCast releases first full-color HD videos of Earth recorded from ISS
We’ve seen lots of Bluetooth earbuds in the $20-$30 range, but if you prefer on-ears, this is one of the best deals we’ve seen to date. Etekcity’s RoverBeats F1 Bluetooth headphones boast 10 hours of battery life, a built-in mic for handsfree calls, and a 4.4 star review average. [Etekcity RoverBeats F1: Bluetooth 4.0+EDR Wireless Stereo Headphones, $30 with code WIRELE88]
Head over to Kinja Deals for the rest of today’s best deals.
Commerce Content is independent of Editorial and Advertising, and if you buy something through our posts, we may get a small share of the sale. Click here to learn more. We want your feedback.Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker
Send deal submissions to Deals@Gawker and all other inquiries to Shane@Gawker
Follow us for the best deals on the Internet, and check out http://t.co/w8ke7mw7nT
via Gizmodo
Cut the Cord With These $30 On-Ear Bluetooth Headphones
President Obama addressed last night’s Charleston, South Carolina church shooting before the media today: “I don’t need to be constrained about the emotions tragedies like this raise. I’ve had to make comments like this too many times. Communities like this … Read More
The post Obama: It is in our power to do something about mass shootings appeared first on The Truth About Guns.
via The Truth About Guns
Obama: It is in our power to do something about mass shootings
After pointing out what Ultron should have done in Avengers: Age of Ultron, How It Should Have Ended demonstrates how the heroes could have made their lives easier, if time and licensing (and stupidity) were not issues.
via The Awesomer
How Age of Ultron Should’ve Ended 2