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Gweb Google Maps Has Freaking Amazing Underwater Street View Now
Last night episode of Game of Thrones had so many oh shit moments it was almost too stressful to watch 鈥?like when you ;re in an airplane and it suddenly drops a few hundred feet in a few seconds. Everybody suspended over the abyss, with a few threadbare ropes keeping them aloft. And last night, we saw the shape of that abyss. When the illusion of control drops away, and you realize that there are some wild creatures you can ;t domesticate and some people you can ;t just push around, then you ;re lost. Spoilers ahead 8230; It seems like almost every episode of Game of Thrones has one speech that lays out some food for thought that touches every other part of the episode 鈥?although, to its credit, this show is always subtle rather than bludgeony about it. Last night, the honor belonged to Qhorin Halfhand, the legendary Ranger who has spent more time North of the Wall than anyone, and knows these mysterious Wildlings. Talking to Jon Snow about his wandering direwolf Ghost, Qhorin says, You can ;t tame a wild thing. You can ;t trust a wild thing 8230; Wild creatures have their own rules, their own reasons, and you ;ll never know them. This applies to the Wildlings as well as to Ghost 鈥?and it de stanley cup uk finitely applies to Ygritte, the improb stanley cup ably well-groome stanley becher d girl that Jon Snow takes prisoner later in the episode. Jon Snow is a lot more merciful and kind than most of the other characters on this show 鈥?h Irzi Sex, Anarchy, and Robert Pattinson s Hair Haunt David Cronenberg s Cosmopolis
It doesn ;t matter how many signal relay towers blanket your city, the quality of your wireless reception can often change drastically鈥攕ometimes within a few steps. But MIT researchers think they ;ve figured out how to improve reception using error correcting codes that work regardless of signal noise. Error correcting codes ECC are a means of encoding data and so as to transmit it without losing fidelity and regardless of the communication channel level of noise. It works by sending out an encoded test message, like a codeword, to test the level of noise on a channel鈥攖he more noise in the channel, the longer the codeword needs to be. The problem is that on noisy channels, the codeword becomes prohibitively long, and on channels with fluctuating noise levels, the codeword may be too short to ensure proper transmission of the data. MIT solution for this problem is simple鈥攗se a single long code word broken into chunks. As Gregory Wornell, a professor in the Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science at MIT explains, The transmission strategy is that we send the first part of the codeword. If it doesn ;t succeed, stanley shop we send the second part, a stanley cup nd so on. We don ;t repeat transmissions: We always send the next part rather than resen stanley water jug ding the same part again. Because when you marry the first part, which was too noisy to decode, with the second and any subsequent parts, they together constitute a new, good encoding of the message fo |
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