And it’s always been like this in the BBC. During World War Two, BBC broadcasters were expressly told not to call the Nazis evil or wicked, even though they could and did call them “the enemy”.
And it’s always been like this in the BBC. During World War Two, BBC broadcasters were expressly told not to call the Nazis evil or wicked, even though they could and did call them “the enemy”.
forgotten the name
I’m gonna guess… IPv5
I’ve gotten 3 drives from serverpartdeals, an 18 and a pair of 22s. They were $220, about half price.
There are also some travel-friendly requirements-
Open 6+ days a week Public restrooms Drinking water
Each state is different but they’re generally similar to NYs for instance
We’ve got one of those in my town. The height is only 10’ 8", and the road makes a V going under the tracks. Long wheelbase trucks might make it through until the front wheels start going up the hill on the other side.
Oh shit I read it wrong, she’s 40 years old.
Yeah so like 5
That lady handled 40, but she’s a jogger and in better shape than me. I could take 25.
And Sony patented this garbage
Does a Sony Patent Propose Viewers Skip Commercials by Yelling Brand Names at TV?
That was 15 years ago.
It volts up under load, maybe the problem is too little voltage at light loads.
Wasn’t directed at you, it just sounds like such a hyperbolic statement but I remember it happening
https://apnews.com/article/877ee1015f1c43f1965f63538b035d3f
That’s literally what happened
How do you prove that your ad campaign is working?
That’s the neat part- you don’t!
https://freakonomics.com/podcast/does-advertising-actually-work-part-2-digital-ep-441/
Pretty sure openmediavault uses it, but that’s the only one I’ve seen
It depends where you measure. If you measure across the inductor, it absolutely goes negative.
The frequency is generally fixed, the duty cycle will vary.
A variable speed drive can be fed with DC. Is the output AC or DC? I know you need a three phase AC motor to wire up to it.
Is audio DC? It doesn’t have a fixed frequency. Amplifiers pulse DC and then remove or ‘block’ the DC offset so speakers see AC.
It seems like people in this thread have a very strict definition of AC being a 60Hz sine wave, and everything else must be DC.
Is a square wave not AC? Current is flowing in and out of an inductor 100k times a second.
Could that 100khz square wave excite a transformer and produce usable current on the secondary? Absolutely it could, and that’s how a bigger SMPS works.
If you’re looking for a “pure DC to pure DC” converter, that’s called a linear regulator and it’s wildly inefficient. They work by varying the conductance of a transistor but are useful for low currents. The extra voltage is converted to heat.
Do the devices have dual 10g ports each? You can build a triangle out of them.