Six years ago in July 2010 OpenStack held its first ever Summit with a group of 75 people, many from Rackspace and NASA, gathering in Austin, Texas to help launch the open source project. This week 7,500 attendees descended on the 14th semi-annual OpenStack Summit, which returned to its hometown for the first time since that inaugural event. Things are very different now than they were then.
Developers, analysts and the media have descended upon sunny San Jose this week for Intel's biannual review of its products and partnerships. And Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is here as well, demonstrating some of its long-awaited 64-bit products and outlining its mobile strategy at briefings down the street from the San Jose Convention Center, site of the Intel Developer Forum.
Lately, the spotlight has swung toward Long-Term Evolution (LTE), the so-called fourth-generation mobile broadband technology descended from GSM cellular protocols. CDMA veteran Verizon Wireless, for example, has switched to LTE as its future mobile service delivery platform. GSM-based AT&T is, unsurprisingly headed that way, too. And recently, mobile base station maker Nortel dumped its WiMAX product development in deference to LTE.
Hundreds descended upon Harvard Innovation Lab to try out the latest augmented and virtual reality gear, listen to Magic Leap's founder, and learn about this next visually-compelling phase of computing
Most Linux users know vim as a text editor that descended from vi. It can also function as a tool for encrypting text files. In this post, we examine how this is done and how to reverse the process.
A Denver SWAT team descended on a 77-year-old grandmother because they thought a stolen truck and guns were hiding in her garage thanks to Apple's Find My service and an overzealous police officer.
Lately, the spotlight has swung toward Long-Term Evolution (LTE), the so-called fourth-generation mobile broadband technology descended from GSM cellular protocols. CDMA veteran Verizon Wireless, for example, has switched to LTE as its future mobile service delivery platform. GSM-based AT&T is, unsurprisingly headed that way, too. And recently, mobile base station maker Nortel dumped its WiMAX product development in deference to LTE.
Advocates on both sides of the net neutrality debate descended on Harvard Law School Monday for a U.S. Federal Communications Commission hearing that multiple speakers suggested was crucial to the Internet's future.
Developers, analysts and the media have descended upon sunny San Jose this week for Intel's biannual review of its products and partnerships. And Advanced Micro Devices (AMD) is here as well, demonstrating some of its long-awaited 64-bit products and outlining its mobile strategy at briefings down the street from the San Jose Convention Center, site of the Intel Developer Forum.
Lately, the spotlight has swung toward Long-Term Evolution (LTE), the so-called fourth-generation mobile broadband technology descended from GSM cellular protocols. CDMA veteran Verizon Wireless, for example, has switched to LTE as its future mobile service delivery platform. GSM-based AT&T is, unsurprisingly headed that way, too. And recently, mobile base station maker Nortel dumped its WiMAX product development in deference to LTE.
Hundreds descended upon Harvard Innovation Lab to try out the latest augmented and virtual reality gear, listen to Magic Leap's founder, and learn about this next visually-compelling phase of computing
Six years ago in July 2010 OpenStack held its first ever Summit with a group of 75 people, many from Rackspace and NASA, gathering in Austin, Texas to help launch the open source project. This week 7,500 attendees descended on the 14th semi-annual OpenStack Summit, which returned to its hometown for the first time since that inaugural event. Things are very different now than they were then.
Education took some significant twists and turns when the Covid-19 pandemic descended on the world. We saw a surge of new users, and new tools, around online learning; but we also saw a number of people and organizations more basically start to rethink how to get the best out of learning environments overall. (In fact, […]
I'm using Python and Tkinter to create a GUI for a program I'm writing, and I'm having a couple of problems. I have three objects descended from LabelFrame in an object descended f
instanceof can be used to test if an object is a direct or descended instance of a given class. instanceof can also be used with interfaces even though interfaces can't be instanti
I have two classes, one of which is descended from the other, and I would like to make them both sibling classes descended from the same base class. Before: from django.db import m
collection.Counter('bcdefffaa') returns output: Counter({'f': 3, 'a': 2, 'c': 1, 'b': 1, 'e': 1, 'd': 1}) Since the result is in descended sorted order of values, does this mean
I need a way to for a custom control (descended from TCustomControl) to tell if it is currently visible. I'm not talking about the .Visible property; I mean whether or not it's ac