"The Chartered Mathematician (CMath) designation represents high levels of professionalism and competence in mathematics. It is awarded by the Institute of Mathematics and its Applications to practicing professional mathematicians who demonstrate, as well as their professional status and competence, a commitment to keep pace with advancing knowledge in mathematics and its applications."
I swear i saw a @DavidPostill answer on win10 threshold touchscreen messup, really bad people not able to get in. But he has so many answers :-) and win10 search came up with So many touch problems.
It indicated that MS know about it, and some specific update should be avoided for a while.
@tereško The other edge of gaming is that there are occasions where you want the lowest milliseconds response and not have to rely on some in-between frame, this is where movie (talking 24 fps) vs serious gaming (talking 144 fps) makes a world of difference (6 times).
1) Set the frame rate limiter yourself if you want your games to feel like a movie 2) High-end cameras in professional sports are also 60fps 3) WTF dudde
You can have really open worlds, you can have really linear storylines... you can have visual novels that literally give you no control apart from clicking through them.
@qasdfdsaq Here I sit looking for an open world game where you don't spend your time watching yourself travel from place to place, but rather, constant interactive action.
Blindfold chess (also known as sans voir) is a form of chess play wherein the players do not see the positions of the pieces or touch them. This forces players to maintain a mental model of the positions of the pieces. Moves are communicated via a recognized chess notation.
Blindfold chess was considered miraculous for centuries, but now there is greater recognition of people who can keep track of more than one simultaneous blindfolded game. In simultaneous blindfold play, an intermediary usually relays the moves between the players.
== Early historyEdit ==
Blindfold chess was first played quite...
@allquixotic You are allowed to "try" different moves to see if they are legal or not. This lets you improve your mental image of where pieces are actually located on the board. Of course if your move succeeds you have to make it.
> In build 10240, the Start menu could only contain about 500 items, be they live tiles, program shortcuts, links to readmes and uninstallers, or anything else. Any items above this number were simply ignored; not shown in the menu, and not accessible to the menu's built-in search. 10586 increases this limit from 512 items to 2048.
I mean, even 120gb goes for $50 these days, but then again I might want to save my money for a card that will let me place Space Engineers at a decent framerate... and that supports dx11
It's around £158 inc. taxes in the UK. $240 USD if you don't account for the fact rip-off Britain basically converts $USD prices to £GBP on a 1:1 basis.
I recently moved my furniture around in my apartment, causing me to relocate my cable modem to another wall that has the coax cable port. Without having to call my ISP i instantly received the same signal that I was receiving on the other wall. I ran a speed test and it's the same Mbps that I was...
Meh, the question seems clear. OP has two location with a coax connection. Probably connecting to the same cable. (s)he wonders if using two modems means up to twice the speed.
@DavidPostill Depends what speeds you're paying for. Under the right conditions, yes.
In the UK the coax capacity is around 6Gbps. Only about 800Mbps is in use on most nodes at the moment, though most are in the process of being upgraded to 1.6Gbps. The remainder is used for CATV/VoD/test systems/VoC
Depending on the node layout, if you have a 10 x 50Mbps subscriptions then yes, you'll get 500Mbps. If you get 10x 150Mbps, you won't get more than 800
@DavidPostill In the UK you can't get a second modem without a second subscription. So to be able to connect two modems in the first place you'd need two subscriptions.
It's the same in most countries actually
The U.S. is an odd exception where you can buy modems independent of ISP services. Some weird regulatory requirement.